DNV GL released a study last week that examines the challenges associated with manufacturing and deploying next-generation, increasingly larger land-based wind turbines.
In the past decade, DNV GL says, the U.S. wind energy industry has achieved significant improvements in energy production and cost efficiency, driven in part by increased turbine, blade and tower size. However, the industry is quickly approaching a logistical cost and capability ceiling as turbine components become too large for existing infrastructure and transportation to accommodate.
The largest blades deployed in the U.S. are 67 m, but blades up to 88.4 m have been deployed in Europe; blades up to 115 m are on the horizon. As turbine component sizes increase, logistical constraints can reduce the number of developable sites or elevate costs, making some potential sites economically uncompetitive. Finding new solutions to logistical challenges associated with ever-larger components can enable the wind industry to achieve optimal levelized cost of energy (LCOE) options for every region of the U.S., DNV GL says.
The study was commissioned by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
DNV GL explored three innovation pathways to help identify high-value R&D opportunities:
- Innovative transportation: To address physical constraints and challenges, new methods can facilitate the transportation of blades from factories to wind projects via road, rail or air.
- Segmented blades: Segmented or modular blades may enable the use of more cost-effective transportation but must also account for the impacts on blade design, manufacturing and on-site assembly.
- On-site manufacturing: Deploying a temporary blade manufacturing factory at the project site to fabricate blades from raw materials to finished product largely eliminates transportation challenges associated with longer blades.
“DNV GL identified a number of R&D activities that could make contributions to the viable development of supersized blades. These recommendations are feeding into the U.S. Department of Energy-funded ‘Big Adaptive Rotor’ project to assess and prioritize technology needed to develop a cost-competitive land-based 5-MW turbine with 100-meter-long blades,” said Ryan Wiser, senior scientist, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
Acceleration of R&D
The acceleration of R&D to make supersized blades feasible requires collaboration between researchers in the U.S., turbine manufacturers, blade manufacturers and transportation logistics companies. Blades are the most critical component in determining the technical and economic performance of wind turbines.
“To realize continued progress in making wind energy cost-competitive across all regions in the U.S., the wind industry must accelerate R&D in innovative approaches to blade design, manufacture and transportation,” said Richard S. Barnes, executive vice president, Energy North America at DNV GL. “The good news is that there appears to be fertile ground for R&D and accessible solutions on the near horizon.”
High-value R&D areas include:
- Further advances in high-stiffness/low-cost materials like industrial carbon fiber and thermoplastics materials.
- Advanced controls and sensor technologies that could be applied to monitor or enable blade bending in transport or monitor or control segmented blade loads such that lower-weight blades can be achieved.
- Reducing the blade chord dimension would enable operation at higher tip speeds and improves blade transport potential, but issues related to aeroacoustics and leading-edge erosion need further improvement. Advanced aeroelastic modelling of dynamic stability and deflections can enable the development of more slender blades that can allow controlled deflection during transport.
DNV GL is a global quality assurance and risk management company. The company delivers testing and advisory services to the energy value chain, including renewables and energy management.
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