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Evaluation of wave-turbulence decomposition methods applied to experimental wave and grid-generated turbulence data.

Authors :
Perez, Larissa
Cossu, Remo
Grinham, Alistair
Penesis, Irene
Source :
Ocean Engineering. Dec2020, Vol. 218, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Tidal energy turbines are significantly impacted by surface gravity waves and high turbulence levels, which lead to increased blade loads and consequent device fatigue. Accurately describing turbulence quantities is a key factor to improve numerical models and ensure the minimum necessary device longevity. The application of an appropriate wave-turbulence decomposition technique substantially improves estimates and must be debated by the tidal energy community. This work analyses two wave-turbulence decomposition techniques: i) linear wave theory and ii) Synchrosqueezing Wavelet Transform (SWT) based on physical modelling. The experiments were conducted in a towing tank and the physical model used Froude scaling to simulate wave heights and frequencies based on field measurements from a tidal energy candidate site in Australia. Turbulence was generated using a grid with 47 mm openings replicating turbulence intensities of 17%, 23% and 25%. Both decomposition techniques present limitations in wave frequencies above 0.7 Hz. Our results suggest that the SWT technique is more versatile and more efficient under various conditions. Restrictions to the linear wave theory method are discussed with regards to ADCP geometry and possible non-linearity. The variability obtained from the wave-turbulence decomposition techniques emphasizes the importance of establishing guidelines for turbulence characterization in tidal energy sites. • Grid-generated turbulence is used in interaction with surface waves in a towing tank. • Impact of wave-turbulence decomposition on tidal energy site assessments is emphasized. • Wave-turbulence decomposition plays an important role in turbulence characterization. • SWT wave-turbulence decomposition technique proves to be satisfactorily versatile. • SWT decomposition is suitable in wave frequencies often observed in tidal energy sites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00298018
Volume :
218
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Ocean Engineering
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
147604784
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.oceaneng.2020.108186