Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
252969 Composite Structures 2012 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

The prediction of damage progression in composite wind turbine blades, especially under dynamic aeroelastic conditions, is usually a cumbersome multi-step process with significant manual user intervention. In this paper a novel approach is presented where the different components of this process – dynamical structural analysis under varying aerodynamic and deterministic loads, and damage progression – are integrated into one reduced-order model capable of predicting the occurrence and progression of damage in real time. Key to this integration is the use of an effective one-dimensional model of the turbine blade known as thin-wall beam model, which allows for the reconstruction of a three-dimensional stress field of a volume given by the blade. This stress field can then be used to assess damage and locally modify the structural properties to account for the presence of damage, leading to a reduced load carrying capacity. The model was previously tested in its components, demonstrating a good agreement of the predicted structural and static damage progression behaviour compared to detailed high-order finite-element models of the same blade. Once validated, the model was applied to severe load cases and the potential for real-time predictions of damage progression was demonstrated.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Civil and Structural Engineering
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