1 / 28

Analysis of Structural Failures of Wind Towers

Analysis of Structural Failures of Wind Towers. AMERICAN WIND ENERGY ASSOCIATION May 2009 Dilip Khatri, PhD, MBA, SE Senior Structural Engineer URS Corporation Los Angeles, CA. Analysis of Structural Failures. Wind Tower Structures Structural Failures Wind Power Economics

lela
Télécharger la présentation

Analysis of Structural Failures of Wind Towers

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Analysis of Structural Failures of Wind Towers AMERICAN WIND ENERGY ASSOCIATION May 2009 Dilip Khatri, PhD, MBA, SE Senior Structural Engineer URS Corporation Los Angeles, CA

  2. Analysis of Structural Failures • Wind Tower Structures • Structural Failures • Wind Power Economics • Structural Design Considerations • Improving Structural Design Practice

  3. Wind Farms

  4. Wind Tower Structures 1980s – 1990s: Wind Towers < 40m Truss Structures Turbine Sizes 250 kW – 500 kW

  5. Wind Towers 1980’s – 2002 • Wind Towers 40m – 60m • Steel Tubular Towers • Spread Footings • Pile – Cap Foundations • P&H Foundation • 1 MW Turbine • 1.5 – 2.0 MW Turbine

  6. Wind Towers 2002 - present • Wind Towers 60m – 80m • Steel Tubular Towers • Spread Footings • Pile – Cap Foundations • P&H Foundation • 2.0 MW Turbine = 400,000 # - 500,000 # [190-230kN] • 2.5 – 3.0 MW Turbine

  7. Wind Towers - Future • 100m + Tower Heights • 3.0 MW – 5.0 MW Turbines • 700 kips [300 kN]

  8. Why Taller Towers? Wind Energy Basics POWER = dW/dt = Energy (work)/time = Torque x Angular Velocity

  9. Swept Rotor Area

  10. Structural Failures Structural Tubular Failures: • Diameter-thickness ratios are high • Buckling failure due to instability of the tower tube

  11. Structural Failures Structural Tubular Failures: • E-stop load condition • Overspeed of the rotor

  12. Foundation Failures

  13. Foundation Design Issues • Overturning moment • Soil failure • Dynamic stiffness • Fatigue causing cracks in concrete • Rotational stiffness degradation • Soil-structure interaction

  14. Structural Failure/Collapse of Wind Towers • 3 short videos of wind tower collapse • Tower design issues • E-stop loading • Rotor imbalance • Fatigue cracking • Buckling/stability failure

  15. Tower Failure

  16. Wind Power Economics:Utility Grade Projects • Typical cost of 1 wind tower is $1,500,000 to $2,000,000/tower • 60 – 80m tower height • 1.5MW-2.0MW turbine • Tower cost = $300,000 • $245,000 for steel materials + labor • $50,000 for exterior painting • $5,000 for engineering design, permitting

  17. Wind Power Economics:Utility Grade Projects • Foundation Cost = $200,000 • $100,000 for construction, materials, labor, onsite management • $10,000 for design engineering, plans, permit • Nacelle + Rotor = $1,100,000 • $900,000 Purchased from the Power Generation company • $200,000 for onsite crane and assembly • Tower = $300,000 • Total Cost = $1,600,000/tower

  18. Wind Power Projects • A typical wind power project consisting of 100 towers is 100 X $1.6MM = $160MM project • Bank loan (80% debt-equity ratio) = $128,000,000 • Risk factor to banks and insurance companies

  19. Structural Design Considerations • Foundation-Soil-Tower Analysis; combined analysis of the completed structure with soil profile included • 3D Finite Element Analysis of taller towers • 3D FEA of soil and foundation structure • Germanisher Lloyd Guidelines; GL Certificate of Approval • Soil-structure interaction analysis of the foundation • Consider E-stop loading

  20. Structural Design ImprovementsFinite Element Analysis • Perform a detailed FEA of the tower and include the nacelle + rotor into the model • Perform a soil-structure interaction model • Frequency Response Analysis • Dynamic Response Analysis • Fatigue analysis on the foundation elements • Include soil fatigue

  21. Finite Element Analysis • 3D FEA Models are necessary to include all vibration modes • 3D models capture the torsional behavior and buckling characteristics

  22. Finite Element Analysis • Tower-Foundation Models capture the full frequency behavior • Soil-structure interaction analysis allows for the foundation to be included with the soil strata

  23. Finite Element Analysis • Tower-Foundation Models capture the full frequency behavior • Soil-structure interaction analysis allows for the foundation to be included with the soil strata

  24. FLAC3D Soil-Structure Interaction Model • FLAC3D for soil-structure interaction analysis to model micropiles with a concrete cap • Overturning Moment analysis • Uplift capacity • Post-Tension Effects

  25. Yaw Plate Analysis • ANSYS FEA of Yaw Plate • Eccentric Loads cause stress concentrations • Off-axis wind gusts magnify the moments on the yaw plate

  26. Structural Failure of Wind Towers • Over-speed condition • E-stop loading • Fatigue cracking in the tower shell • Foundation rotation due to overturning moment, soil creep, soil fatigue, or combination of soil-foundation stiffness degradation

  27. Structural Failure of Wind Towers • Tower buckling • Blade separation • Eccentric loading due to offset between CG and geometric center of tower nacelle (i.e., built in eccentric loading)

  28. Improving Structural Design Methods • Structural Performance Monitoring • Comprehensive Research on Structural Failures • Evaluation of All Load Conditions • Sharing our Design Problems for Discussion • Statistical Record Keeping • Improving the Design Codes

More Related