The paper presents incompressible Navier-Stokes simulations of the dynamics of a floating wave energy converter (WEC) coupled to a high-order finite element solver for cable dynamics. The coupled model has very few limiting assumptions and is capable of capturing the effects of breaking waves, green water loads on the WEC as well as non-linear mooring forces and snap loads, all of which are crucial for correct estimates of the extreme loads acting on the system in violent seas. The cable dynamics model has been developed as a stand-alone library that can be coupled to any body motion solver. In this study the open-source CFD package OpenFOAM has been employed. Preliminary test cases using incident regular Stoke's 5th order waves are presented, both for wave heights corresponding to operational conditions of the WEC as for a more severe condition in survival mode. It is illustrated that the coupled model is able to capture the complicated force propagation in the mooring cables.
A coupling between a dynamic mooring solver based on high-order finite element techniques (MooDy) and a radiation-diffraction based hydrodynamic solver (WEC-Sim) is presented. The high-order scheme gives fast convergence resulting in high-resolution simulations at a lower computational cost. The model is compared against a lumped mass mooring code (MoorDyn) that has an existing coupling to WEC-Sim. The two models are compared for a standard test case and the results are similar, giving confidence in the new WEC-Sim-MooDy coupling. Finally, the coupled model is validated using experimental data of a spread moored cylinder with good agreement.
Floating wave energy converters (WECs) operating in the resonance region are strongly affected by non-linearities arising from the interaction between the waves, the WEC motion and the mooring restraints. To compute the restrained WEC motion thus requires a method which readily accounts for these effects. This paper presents a method for coupled mooring analysis using a two-phase Navier-Stokes (VOF-RANS) model and a high-order finite element model of mooring cables. The method is validated against experimental measurements of a cylindrical buoy in regular waves, slack-moored with three catenary mooring cables. There is overall a good agreement between experimental and computational results with respect to buoy motions and mooring forces. Most importantly, the coupled numerical model accurately recreates the strong wave height dependence of the response amplitude operators seen in the experiments.
Coupled mooring analysis using CFD with dynamic mooring models is becoming an established field. This is an important step for better predictions of responses of moored marine structures in extreme sea states and also for capturing the low-frequency response correctly. The coupling between the CFD and mooring solvers are most often carried out by exchanging the fairlead/anchor points and fairlead forces. In this paper we will discuss the effects of using (i) viscous fluid flow on a mooring component level (submerged buoys and clump weights) and (ii) the fluid-structure coupling between the viscous fluid solver and the mooring system.
Mooring systems are required to keep floating wave energy converters (WECs) on station. The mooring concept might impact the performance of the WEC, its cost and its integrity. With the aim of clarifying the pros and cons of different mooring designs, we present the results from physical model experiments of three different mooring concepts in regular and irregular waves, including operational and survival conditions. The parameters investigated are the tension in the cables, the motions of the device in the different degrees of freedom and the seabed footprint in each case. We can see that the mooring system affects the performance of the wave energy converter, but the magnitude of the impact depends on the parameter analysed, on the mode of motion studied and on the conditions of the sea. Moreover, different configurations have similar performances in some situations and the choice of one over another might come down to factors such as the type of soil of the seabed, the spacing desired between devices, or environmental impacts. The results of our experiments provide information for a better selection of the mooring system for a wave energy converter when several constraints are taken into account (power production, maximum displacements, extreme tensions, etc).
High-fidelity viscous computational fluid dynamics (CFD) models coupled to dynamic mooring models is becoming an established tool for marine wave-body-mooring (WBM) interaction problems. The CFD and the mooring solvers most often communicate by exchanging positions and mooring forces at the mooring fairleads. Mooring components such as submerged buoys and clump weights are usually not resolved in the CFD model, but are treated as Morison-type bodies. This paper presents two recent developments in high-fidelity WBM modelling: (i) a one-way fluid-mooring coupling that samples the CFD fluid kinematics to approximate drag and inertia forces in the mooring model; and (ii) support for inter-moored multibody simulations that can resolve fluid dynamics on a mooring component level. The developments are made in the high-order discontinuous Galerkin mooring solver MoodyCore, and in the two-phase incompressible Navier–Stokes finite volume solver OpenFOAM. The fluid-mooring coupling is verified with experimental tests of a mooring cable in steady current. It is also used to model the response of the slack-moored DeepCwind FOWT exposed to regular waves. Minor effects of fluid-mooring coupling were noted, as expected since this a mild wave case. The inter-mooring development is demonstrated on a point-absorbing WEC moored with a hybrid mooring system, fully resolved in CFD-MoodyCore. The WEC (including a quasi-linear PTO) and the submerged buoys are resolved in CFD, while the mooring dynamics include inter-mooring effects and the one-way sampling of the flow. The combined wave-body-mooring model is judged to be very complete and to cover most of the relevant effects for marine WBM problems.
Mooring systems for floating wave energy converters often rely on floaters to allow for minimum restraints of the body motion in heavy. However, the inclusion of floaters also introduce possible slack-taut scenarios induced by the dynamic response of the floater in relation to the fair-lead point of the mooring. This can increase the occurrence of snap loads. The present study outlines the work to include floaters and sinks into a high-order discontinuous Galerkin model for mooring cable dynamics. Numerical simulations of a mooring leg adapted from the Waves4Power full-scale device are performed, and the results from varying the floater geometry are analyzed.
For this case the floater influence on the occurrence of snap loads was clearly evident. There is a strong correlation between floater pitch response and cable slack in the upper mooring cable. For a floater with constant buoyancy, increasing the floater height and thereby increasing the pitch inertia of the floater is shown to decrease the range of frequencies where cable slack occurs. It is illustrated that for some cases, changing floater geometry can avoid slack altogether. A careful design of the floater geometry can thus make a large difference for the dynamic load factor of the mooring system.
In a number of experiments and field tests of point absorbers, snap loads have been identified to cause damage on the mooring cables. Snap loads are basically propagating shock waves, which require special care in the numerical modeling of the mooring cable dynamics. In this paper we present a mooring cable model based on a conservative formulation, discretized using the Runge-Kutta discontinuous Galerkin method. The numerical model is thus well suited for correctly capturing snap loads. The numerical model is verified and validated using analytic and experimental data and the computed results are satisfactory.
A numerical model (MOODY) for the study of the dynamics of cables is presented in Palm et al. (2013), which was developed for the design of mooring systems for floating wave energy converters. But how does it behave when it is employed together with the tools used to model floating bodies? To answer this question, MOODY was coupled to a linear potential theory code and to a computational fluid dynamics code (OpenFOAM), to model small scale experiments with a moored buoy in linear waves. The experiments are well reproduced in the simulations, with the exception of second order effects when linear potential theory is used and of the small overestimation of the surge drift when computational fluid dynamics is used. The results suggest that MOODY can be used to successfully model moored floating wave energy converters.
The present paper describes the work carried out in the project ’Mooring Solutions for Large Wave Energy Converters’, which is a Danish research project carried out in a period of three years from September 2014, with the aim of reducing cost of the moorings for four wave energy converters and improving the applied design procedure. The paper presents the initial layouts and costs and illustrates which solutions could potentially reduce cost. Different methods for analysis of the systems were applied, ranging from simple quasi-static analysis to full dynamic analysis and experimental work. The numerical methods were compared to the experimental data, and results showed significant underestimation of tensions in the quasi-static model while reasonable overestimation was found in the dynamic analysis even without major tuning of the model. The dynamic analysis has then been implemented in a meta-model based optimization process with the aim of optimizing the mooring layout for each WEC according to cost of the systems.