Navigation
Secondary menu
Content
Footer
en
fr
Nous vous invitons à découvrir le rapport d'activité 2022 de Centrale Nantes / Read the 2022 Annual Report for Centrale Nantes
menu
close
About us
About us
Vision and values
Governance
2023 in numbers
Awards and distinctions in 2023
Alumni
Social Audit
Year in Review
Year in Review
Equality, diversity and inclusion in the school's DNA
A strong commitment to CSR
Training and employability
Research and Innovation
Research and Innovation
Research Institutes
Research and Innovation in 2023
Incubator
Awards for research
Internationalisation
Archives
Archives
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
English version
Research and Innovation
Research and Innovation in 2023
Research and Innovation
Research Institutes
Research and Innovation in 2023
Incubator
Awards for research
Ocean tank
,
HP_Flow tank test campaign on the hydrodynamic modelling of heave plates for floating wind turbines
Tests for the HP_Flow project took place in June 2022 in the Hydrodynamic and Ocean Engineering Tank at Centrale Nantes. Watch the footage of this test campaign on the hydrodynamics of heave plates which are designed to damp the heave motion of floating wind turbines.
on
November 30, 2022
The LHEEA's HP-Flow project started in September 2020 as part of
WEAMEC's
"Research" calls for projects in partnership with
NTNU
and
Innosea
.
This project focuses on hydrodynamic modelling of heave plates for floating wind turbines. Heave plates are generally flat horizontal plates installed at the base of floating foundations and with a diameter larger than the foundation itself. These plates damp the heave and pitch motion of the whole structure and shift the natural frequencies of the system to limit its movement.
The dual objective of HP_Flow is to model the hydrodynamics of heave plates for floating wind turbines and to carry out tank tests of different generic floating supports, which are representative of those used in floating wind turbines. The design work for the entire experimental device was carried out by the tank teams. It consists of a tripod installed at the centre of the
Hydrodynamic and Ocean Engineering Tank
on which a hexapod is installed which imposes movements on the model. A set of measuring devices (wave sensors, load platforms, accelerometer and strain gauges) was also installed.
Testing in pictures:
Objectives of this HP_Flow test campaign:
Carry out tests in different configurations
: with movements imposed by a hexapod, with swell alone and with swell and synchronised movements;
Obtain a database of hydrodynamic coefficients
for different heave plate geometries, adapted to floating wind turbines
;
Study free surface effects
(in shallow depth configurations), the effect of porosity;
And
validate the development of CFD calculation code
, to constitute a database which will be used for other projects for the validation of numerical models and to inform existing numerical models in a more refined way.
The results of the HP_Flow project will significantly advance the knowledge of the behaviour of heave plates and the physical mechanisms governing their responses to wind turbine movements and waves, in order to continue to provide data to improve the design of floating wind turbine platforms.
> Learn more about HP_Flow:
https://www.weamec.fr/en/projects/hp_flow/
Published on December 14, 2022
Updated on October 19, 2023
Share :
Facebook
X
Linkedin
More news
Complete overhaul of the Hydrodynamic and Ocean Engineering Tank on the Centrale Nantes campus
Rogue waves generated in the towing tank - article published in Physical Review Fluids
European project LiftWEC: an innovative wave energy system tested in the Centrale Nantes ocean tanks
https://rapport-activite.ec-nantes.fr/english-version/research-and-innovation-in-2018/campagne-dessais-en-bassins-hp-flow-sur-la-modelisation-hydrodynamique-des-plaques-anti-pilonnement-pour-leolien-flottant