Affiliation:
1. Wind Fluids and Experiments (WindFluX) Laboratory, Mechanical Engineering Department The University of Texas at Dallas Richardson TX USA
Abstract
SummaryOver the last decades, pulsed light detection and ranging (LiDAR) anemometry has gained growing attention in probing the marine atmospheric boundary layer (MABL) due to its ease of use combined with compelling spatio‐temporal resolution. Among several scanning strategies, fixed scans represent the most prominent choice when high‐frequency resolution is required; however, no information is provided about the spatial heterogeneity of the wind field. On the other hand, volumetric scans allow for the characterization of the spatial variability of the wind field with much lower temporal resolution than fixed scans. In this work, the recently developed “LiDAR Statistical Barnes Objective Analysis” (LiSBOA) algorithm for the optimal design of LiDAR scans and retrieval of wind velocity statistics is tailored for applications in the MABL. The LiDAR data, collected during a recent experimental campaign over Lake Lavon in Texas, show a good consistency of mean velocity profiles between fixed and LiSBOA‐interpolated volumetric data, thus further encouraging the use of coupled fixed and volumetric scans for simultaneous characterizations of wind turbulence statistics along the vertical direction and volumetric heterogeneity of the wind field.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Subject
Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
Cited by
2 articles.
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