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    Analysis, Simulation, and Experiments of Dynamics and Control of a Hydrostatic Wind Turbine Under Partial Load1

    Source: Journal of Dynamic Systems, Measurement, and Control:;2024:;volume( 147 ):;issue: 001::page 11007-1
    Author:
    Leinberger, Mark
    ,
    Mohanty, Biswaranjan
    ,
    Stelson, Kim A.
    DOI: 10.1115/1.4065502
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: Kω2 control, also called torque control, is a popular method for maximizing wind turbine power. For hydrostatic wind turbines, torque control becomes pressure control with pc = K′ω2 because pressure is proportional to torque. Inverse Kω2 control is an alternative approach using rotor speed control with ωc = (p/K′)1/2. This work analyzes the dynamics of hydrostatic wind turbines using forward and inverse Kω2 control with P-, proportional derivative, proportional integral, and proportional integral derivative-control for feedback. Dimensionless, linearized models are used. Analysis shows that the mechanical rotor dynamics are much slower than the hydrostatic transmission dynamics and that frictional and leakage losses are negligible. Linear perturbation of the nonlinear model reveals that the closed-loop control is not in Evan's form so that closed-loop poles and zeros both vary with the loop gain. Pole and zero root locus analysis shows how systems responses change with controller gains. Both control approaches require derivative controller action to sufficiently dampen their responses; both are also fundamentally limited in speed of response by a slow stable pole regardless of controller loop gains. Nonlinear system simulation shows that both control approaches track the maximum power point with nearly identical transient behavior and have nearly identical power losses when using suboptimal values of the control law gain, K. Pressure control has a gain margin of infinity and a phase margin of 99.3 deg, while speed control has a gain margin of 22.4 dB and a phase margin of 73.8 deg showing that pressure control is more robust than speed control. Experiments using the power regenerative hydrostatic test stand at the University of Minnesota show that the control approaches have different transient responses but capture comparable power under steady and turbulent conditions.
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      Analysis, Simulation, and Experiments of Dynamics and Control of a Hydrostatic Wind Turbine Under Partial Load1

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4305455
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    contributor authorLeinberger, Mark
    contributor authorMohanty, Biswaranjan
    contributor authorStelson, Kim A.
    date accessioned2025-04-21T10:04:53Z
    date available2025-04-21T10:04:53Z
    date copyright8/29/2024 12:00:00 AM
    date issued2024
    identifier issn0022-0434
    identifier otherds_147_01_011007.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4305455
    description abstractKω2 control, also called torque control, is a popular method for maximizing wind turbine power. For hydrostatic wind turbines, torque control becomes pressure control with pc = K′ω2 because pressure is proportional to torque. Inverse Kω2 control is an alternative approach using rotor speed control with ωc = (p/K′)1/2. This work analyzes the dynamics of hydrostatic wind turbines using forward and inverse Kω2 control with P-, proportional derivative, proportional integral, and proportional integral derivative-control for feedback. Dimensionless, linearized models are used. Analysis shows that the mechanical rotor dynamics are much slower than the hydrostatic transmission dynamics and that frictional and leakage losses are negligible. Linear perturbation of the nonlinear model reveals that the closed-loop control is not in Evan's form so that closed-loop poles and zeros both vary with the loop gain. Pole and zero root locus analysis shows how systems responses change with controller gains. Both control approaches require derivative controller action to sufficiently dampen their responses; both are also fundamentally limited in speed of response by a slow stable pole regardless of controller loop gains. Nonlinear system simulation shows that both control approaches track the maximum power point with nearly identical transient behavior and have nearly identical power losses when using suboptimal values of the control law gain, K. Pressure control has a gain margin of infinity and a phase margin of 99.3 deg, while speed control has a gain margin of 22.4 dB and a phase margin of 73.8 deg showing that pressure control is more robust than speed control. Experiments using the power regenerative hydrostatic test stand at the University of Minnesota show that the control approaches have different transient responses but capture comparable power under steady and turbulent conditions.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleAnalysis, Simulation, and Experiments of Dynamics and Control of a Hydrostatic Wind Turbine Under Partial Load1
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume147
    journal issue1
    journal titleJournal of Dynamic Systems, Measurement, and Control
    identifier doi10.1115/1.4065502
    journal fristpage11007-1
    journal lastpage11007-15
    page15
    treeJournal of Dynamic Systems, Measurement, and Control:;2024:;volume( 147 ):;issue: 001
    contenttypeFulltext
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