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Two Corrections for Turbulent Kinetic Energy Generated by Wind Farms in the WRF Model
by
Jiménez, Pedro A.
, Wu, Sicheng
, Ma, Yulong
, Archer, Cristina L.
in
Atmospheric stability
/ Corrections
/ Environmental impact
/ Kinetic energy
/ Large eddy simulation
/ Large eddy simulations
/ Oceanic eddies
/ Parameterization
/ Surface temperature
/ Turbine engines
/ Turbines
/ Turbulent kinetic energy
/ Weather forecasting
/ Wind farms
/ Wind power
/ Wind speed
2020
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Two Corrections for Turbulent Kinetic Energy Generated by Wind Farms in the WRF Model
by
Jiménez, Pedro A.
, Wu, Sicheng
, Ma, Yulong
, Archer, Cristina L.
in
Atmospheric stability
/ Corrections
/ Environmental impact
/ Kinetic energy
/ Large eddy simulation
/ Large eddy simulations
/ Oceanic eddies
/ Parameterization
/ Surface temperature
/ Turbine engines
/ Turbines
/ Turbulent kinetic energy
/ Weather forecasting
/ Wind farms
/ Wind power
/ Wind speed
2020
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Do you wish to request the book?
Two Corrections for Turbulent Kinetic Energy Generated by Wind Farms in the WRF Model
by
Jiménez, Pedro A.
, Wu, Sicheng
, Ma, Yulong
, Archer, Cristina L.
in
Atmospheric stability
/ Corrections
/ Environmental impact
/ Kinetic energy
/ Large eddy simulation
/ Large eddy simulations
/ Oceanic eddies
/ Parameterization
/ Surface temperature
/ Turbine engines
/ Turbines
/ Turbulent kinetic energy
/ Weather forecasting
/ Wind farms
/ Wind power
/ Wind speed
2020
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Two Corrections for Turbulent Kinetic Energy Generated by Wind Farms in the WRF Model
Journal Article
Two Corrections for Turbulent Kinetic Energy Generated by Wind Farms in the WRF Model
2020
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Overview
As wind farms grow in number and size worldwide, it is important that their potential impacts on the environment are studied and understood. The Fitch parameterization implemented in the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) Model since version 3.3 is a widely used tool today to study such impacts. We identified two important issues related to the way the added turbulent kinetic energy (TKE) generated by a wind farm is treated in the WRF Model with the Fitch parameterization. The first issue is a simple “bug” in the WRF code, and the second issue is the excessive value of a coefficient, called
C
TKE
, that relates TKE to the turbine electromechanical losses. These two issues directly affect the way that a wind farm wake evolves, and they impact properties like near-surface temperature and wind speed at the wind farm as well as behind it in the wake. We provide a bug fix and a revised value of
C
TKE
that is one-quarter of the original value. This 0.25 correction factor is empirical; future studies should examine its dependence on parameters such as atmospheric stability, grid resolution, and wind farm layout. We present the results obtained with the Fitch parameterization in the WRF Model for a single turbine with and without the bug fix and the corrected
C
TKE
and compare them with high-fidelity large-eddy simulations. These two issues have not been discovered before because they interact with one another in such a way that their combined effect is a somewhat realistic vertical TKE profile at the wind farm and a realistic wind speed deficit in the wake. All WRF simulations that used the Fitch wind farm parameterization are affected, and their conclusions may need to be revisited.
Publisher
American Meteorological Society
Subject
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