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LiSBOA (LiDAR Statistical Barnes Objective Analysis) for optimal design of lidar scans and retrieval of wind statistics – Part 2: Applications to lidar measurements of wind turbine wakes

The LiDAR Statistical Barnes Objective Analysis (LiSBOA), presented in Letizia et al. (2021), is a procedure for the optimal design of lidar scans and calculations over a Cartesian grid of the statistical moments of the velocity field. Lidar data collected during a field campaign conducted at a wind...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Atmospheric measurement techniques 2021-03, Vol.14 (3), p.2095-2113
Main Authors: Letizia, Stefano, Zhan, Lu, Iungo, Giacomo Valerio
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The LiDAR Statistical Barnes Objective Analysis (LiSBOA), presented in Letizia et al. (2021), is a procedure for the optimal design of lidar scans and calculations over a Cartesian grid of the statistical moments of the velocity field. Lidar data collected during a field campaign conducted at a wind farm in complex terrain are analyzed through LiSBOA for two different tests. For both case studies, LiSBOA is leveraged for the optimization of the azimuthal step of the lidar and the retrieval of the mean equivalent velocity and turbulence intensity fields. In the first case, the wake velocity statistics of four utility-scale turbines are reconstructed on a 3D grid, showing LiSBOA's ability to capture complex flow features, such as high-speed jets around the nacelle and the wake turbulent-shear layers. For the second case, the statistics of the wakes generated by four interacting turbines are calculated over a 2D Cartesian grid and compared to the measurements provided by the nacelle-mounted anemometers. Maximum discrepancies, as low as 3 % for the mean velocity (with respect to the free stream velocity) and turbulence intensity (in absolute terms), endorse the application of LiSBOA for lidar-based wind resource assessment and diagnostic surveys for wind farms.
ISSN:1867-8548
1867-1381
1867-8548
DOI:10.5194/amt-14-2095-2021