Advances in Aerodynamics (Jun 2020)

Influence of rotor solidity on trailing edge noise from wind turbine blades

  • Vasishta Bhargava Nukala,
  • Satya Prasad Maddula

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s42774-020-00036-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
pp. 1 – 20

Abstract

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Abstract Noise prediction from streamlined bodies such as wind turbine blades can be predicted accurately using CFD computations that use spatio-temporal turbulence models at the expense of high computational power. In this work, empirical methods proposed from BPM, Grosveld and Lowson are used to compute numerically to analyse the influence of rotor solidity factor on broadband trailing edge noise from a 2 MW horizontal axis wind turbine with a blade length of 37 m. Inputs to acoustic solver are the velocity vector field and boundary layer data which are obtained using blade element momentum and X-Foil. The outputs from acoustic solver are directivity and far field sound pressure on a receiver located at distance of 120 m from tower base. The results have shown that for a wind speed of 10 m/s measured at 10 m above ground, sound power level was found to increase between mid-bands to high frequencies for all three methods. Rotor solidity effect was illustrated at constant rotational speed of 17 RPM and receiver height of 0.5 m located in downwind position. A minimum difference of 1.5dBA was found at f ~ 100 Hz for Lowson method and maximum of ~ 2.8dBA at 1 kHz between two and three blade rotor. For BPM and Grosveld methods however, the sound levels were ~ 5dBA lower for two blade rotor than three blade rotor between f ~ 100 Hz and f ~ 1 kHz. The study also demonstrated that as number of blades increase by integral multiples, the effect on noise radiation from trailing edge of blades increase by 2-5dBA due to amplitude modulation.

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