Abstract
Abstract. Wind energy accounted for 5.6 % of all electricity generation
in the United States in 2016. Much of this development has occurred in rural
locations, where open spaces favorable for harnessing wind also serve general
aviation airports. As such, nearly 40 % of all United States wind turbines exist
within 10 km of a small airport. Wind turbines generate electricity by
extracting momentum from the atmosphere, creating downwind wakes
characterized by wind-speed deficits and increased turbulence. Recently, the
concern that turbine wakes pose hazards for small aircraft has been used to
limit wind-farm development. Herein, we assess roll hazards to small aircraft
using large-eddy simulations (LES) of a utility-scale turbine wake. Wind-generated
lift forces and subsequent rolling moments are calculated for hypothetical
aircraft transecting the wake in various orientations. Stably and neutrally
stratified cases are explored, with the stable case presenting a possible
worst-case scenario due to longer-persisting wakes permitted by lower ambient
turbulence. In both cases, only 0.001 % of rolling moments experienced by
hypothetical aircraft during down-wake and cross-wake transects lead to an
increased risk of rolling.
Subject
Energy Engineering and Power Technology,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
Cited by
9 articles.
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