• Title/Summary/Keyword: 세발지지구조물

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Collision Behavior Comparison of Offshore Wind Tower as Type of Support Structure (지지구조의 형식에 따른 해상풍력타워의 선박충돌거동비교)

  • Lee, Gye-Hee;Kwag, Dae-Jin
    • Journal of the Computational Structural Engineering Institute of Korea
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    • v.35 no.2
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    • pp.93-100
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    • 2022
  • The collision behaviors of the tripod and jacket structures, which are considered as support structures for offshore wind towers at the Southwest sea of Korea, were compared by nonlinear dynamic analysis. These structures, designed for the 3 MW capacity of the wind towers, were modeled using shell elements with nonlinear behaviors, and the tower structure including the nacelle, was modeled by beam and mass elements with elastic materials. The mass of the tripod structure was approximately 1.66 times that of the jacket structure. A barge and commercial ship were modeled as the collision vessel. To consider the tidal conditions in the region, the collision levels were varied from -3.5 m to 3.5 m of the mean sea level. In addition, the collision behaviors were evaluated as increasing the minimum collision energy at the collision speed (=2.6 m/s) of each vessel by four times, respectively. Accordingly, the plastic energy dissipation ratios of the vessel were increased as the stiffness of collision region. The deformations in the wind tower occurred from vibration to collapse of conditions. The tripod structure demonstrated more collision resistance than the jacket structure. This is considered to be due to the concentrated centralized rigidity and amount of steel utilized.

Estimation of Dynamic Characteristics of an Offshore Meteorological Tower using Ambient Measurements (상시계측을 통한 해상기상탑의 동적특성 평가)

  • Gyehee Lee;Le Quoc Cuong;Daejin Kwag
    • Journal of Wind Energy
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    • v.14 no.3
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    • pp.91-99
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    • 2023
  • In research conducted on a southwestern Korean offshore meteorological tower, acceleration datasets were gathered over half a year with time-history sensors. To enhance data credibility, a parallel measurement system was used for verification. A model of the tower was configured using beam elements, and with modifications accounting for added stiffness from auxiliary structures. Ground interactions were considered as calibrated springs based on soil layer properties. The tower's dynamic attributes and mass sensitivity were discerned using eigenvalue analysis. The structural natural frequency was consistent, with variations primarily due to new equipment adding approximately 1400 kgs. With free vibration damping assumptions, a damping ratio of roughly 1 % was derived.