ORCID
- S. Brown: 0000-0002-6858-3316
- M. Hann: 0000-0003-3965-9331
- D. Simmonds: 0000-0001-8968-6261
- R. Rawlinson-Smith: 0000-0001-5830-7054
- D. Greaves: 0000-0003-3906-9630
Abstract
For the prediction of design loads of floating wind turbines in extreme sea states, design standards recommend simulating multiple irregular wave and turbulent wind time series of one to three hour duration. For fixed offshore wind turbines, a constrained wave approach with 10-min simulations is permitted, significantly reducing simulation times. This method is not recommended for floating turbines as the largest wave does not always cause the largest response of interest. This work seeks to develop a response-conditioned, short design event approach to create an equivalent constrained wave method for floating turbines. The responses of spar, semi-submersible, tension leg platform, and barge-type floating wind devices under extreme conditions are modelled numerically using OpenFAST. A method for constraining short response-conditioned wind and wave time series is developed. A comparison of extreme pitch, nacelle accelerations, mooring loads, and tower base bending moments using irregular waves and constrained and unconstrained response-conditioned events is given. The constrained short time series efficiently produced extreme responses within −5% to +20% of those from extended irregular wave and wind series. Care is needed when using unconstrained time series in situations where higher-order effects dominate, such as surge or tower natural periods excited by second-order wave loading.
DOI Link
Publication Date
2025-05-30
Publication Title
Ocean Engineering
Volume
327
ISSN
0029-8018
Acceptance Date
2025-03-08
Deposit Date
2025-04-04
Additional Links
Keywords
Design load, Extreme response, Floating wind, Focused waves, Short design events
Recommended Citation
Tosdevin, T., Brown, S., Fàbregas Flavià, F., Hann, M., Simmonds, D., Rawlinson-Smith, R., Wigg, R., & Greaves, D. (2025) 'On the development and application of short design events for the prediction of extreme responses of floating offshore wind turbines', Ocean Engineering, 327. Available at: 10.1016/j.oceaneng.2025.120929
