DK201900839A1 - System to measure the relative length of a conductive wire in wind turbine blades - Google Patents

System to measure the relative length of a conductive wire in wind turbine blades Download PDF

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Publication number
DK201900839A1
DK201900839A1 DKPA201900839A DKPA201900839A DK201900839A1 DK 201900839 A1 DK201900839 A1 DK 201900839A1 DK PA201900839 A DKPA201900839 A DK PA201900839A DK PA201900839 A DKPA201900839 A DK PA201900839A DK 201900839 A1 DK201900839 A1 DK 201900839A1
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DK
Denmark
Prior art keywords
measurement
blades
turbine
down conductor
blade
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DKPA201900839A
Inventor
Peter Kaad Johansen Oluf
Skov Johansen Martin
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Pj Teknik Holding Aps
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Priority to DKPA201900839A priority Critical patent/DK180378B1/en
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Publication of DK201900839A1 publication Critical patent/DK201900839A1/en
Publication of DK180378B1 publication Critical patent/DK180378B1/en

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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F03MACHINES OR ENGINES FOR LIQUIDS; WIND, SPRING, OR WEIGHT MOTORS; PRODUCING MECHANICAL POWER OR A REACTIVE PROPULSIVE THRUST, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • F03DWIND MOTORS
    • F03D80/00Details, components or accessories not provided for in groups F03D1/00 - F03D17/00
    • F03D80/30Lightning protection
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02EREDUCTION OF GREENHOUSE GAS [GHG] EMISSIONS, RELATED TO ENERGY GENERATION, TRANSMISSION OR DISTRIBUTION
    • Y02E10/00Energy generation through renewable energy sources
    • Y02E10/70Wind energy
    • Y02E10/72Wind turbines with rotation axis in wind direction

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Sustainable Development (AREA)
  • Sustainable Energy (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Wind Motors (AREA)
  • Elimination Of Static Electricity (AREA)

Abstract

A system for measuring if a down conductor is broken, may be based on a relative measurement of the conductor length between the three blades of a typical wind turbine design. This method assumes that in a failed state, at least one of the down conductors presents a different galvanically connected length compared to the others, and also that the turbine is in normal operation (i.e. turbine blades are rotating). A relative measure of the connected length of a down conductor can be obtained by removing the galvanic connection at the connection point at the root of the blade, and inserting a spark gap (fig. 2) including the measurement electronics required for the present invention. Said electronics will measure the charge flow resulting from the voltage potential difference between the down conductor of the blade and the nacelle, and thereby a measure for the potential difference itself. The nacelle is assumed well connected to the ground voltage potential. Comparing the voltage potential measurement across a full revolution of the blades will reveal if one or more blades are characterized by a low voltage potential difference. If that is the case, the down conductor is damaged, and a need for repair activities can be indicated. As the measurement methodology relies on a certain level of electric field being present in the air surrounding the wind turbine, as well as the turbine to be rotating, it is not possible to guarantee instant readout of the health state of the down conductors. However, in most practical cases a turbine will fulfil both measurement criteria on a daily or at least weekly basis. Detection logic is therefore required to both categorize at which times the relative measures for the turbine blades are valid, and for valid periods then detect if the relative measurements appear statistically different across the down conductor of each wind turbine blade. When a lightning strike hits the receptors and down conductor, the conduction path needs to be established via the spark gap. This can be achieved, using a robust and well specified spark gap (e.g. 2kV arching threshold), and designing the measurement electronics to be able to withstand such voltage potential levels, including a reasonable safety margin. This will enable full functionality of the intended purpose of the receptors and down conductor, while leaving the measurement electronics of the present invention capable of surviving lightning strikes, and otherwise continue detecting if a down conductor is broken.

Description

DK 2019 00839 A1 Danish Patent Application, July 2019 Title System to measure the relative length of a conductive wire in wind turbine blades Introduction Wind turbine blades are very exposed to lightning strikes due to their height compared to the immediate surroundings. In order to control the path of a lightning strike discharge most blades make use of conductive lightning receptors placed on the surface of the blade. The receptors are connected to a lightning down conductor inside the blade, which in turn connects to the nacelle and from there the tower down to ground. Mechanical or other environmental stresses may lead to defects in the down conductor inside the blade, resulting in the down conductor cable becoming detached between one or more receptors along the length of the wind turbine blade. This results in loss of a controlled lightning path, and a severely increased risk of blade damage during a lightning strike event. A means for detecting if a lightning down conductor has been disconnected at any point towards the final receptor near the tip of the blade, is needed. Ideally, such a solution should support online monitoring, i.e. the measurement apparatus used should be fixed to the individual blade.
Areas of use The invention is a system to be mounted in a wind turbine to supervise the state of the lightning down conductor within each wind turbine blade.
Prior Art Several methods exist to measure if a conductive wire is broken somewhere along its intended path. A simple resistive measurement as well as high frequency (pulse) wave instruments are typical choices, where the first require a conductive loop to be established, and the latter require complex equipment which carries a comparatively high cost seen with respect to the present invention.
Measurement of the charge of the air, with the purpose of detecting and measuring lightning discharges is e.g. described in the U.S. Patent to Murtha, Jr., et al., issued Nov. 2, 1999, (U.S. Pat. No. 6,061,216) for a Lightning Detection Apparatus and Methodology which makes use of an antenna and amplifier configuration for receiving electrostatic discharges of lightning and electrical noise to output an analog electrical signal representative of the discharge. This analog signal is applied to a threshold detection circuit whose output is activated when the input signal rises above a predetermined level. Herein a computer or similar device examines the output to determine an open event window. It is the pulses of the event window that are given signatures which are compared. If the pulse signature correlates with that of lightning, then an alert signal is generated.
40 Measurement of the charge from a lightning running through a down-conducting system is described in "Method for detection of charge originating from lightning (US patent no. US9450392B2)'. The invention relates to a detection apparatus of a wind turbine wherein said wind turbine comprises a down-conducting system arranged to conduct current induced from lightning, 45 wherein said detection apparatus comprises a charge measurement apparatus for establishment of a charge representation, wherein said charge representation represents charge induced into said down- conducting system by lightning, and wherein said detection apparatus further comprises an estimator for estimating deterioration induced by lightning of one or more components in a wind turbine on the basis of said charge representation.
50 Page 1 of 6
DK 2019 00839 A1 An example of electric field measurement in the air is described in Korean patent number KR101813851B1. Non-rotating type electric field sensor based on electronic circuits: Provided is a non-rotational ground-level electric field measuring sensor based on an electronic circuit, comprising: a lower electrode (10) having a flat plate shape; a flat plate-shaped upper electrode (20) located over the lower electrode (10) and insulated from the lower electrode (10); a grounding unit (30); a first switching device (40) formed on the grounding unit (30) to determine whether to connect the upper electrode (20) and the ground through the grounding unit (30); a microprocessor (MPU) (50) generating a control signal for the first switching device (400) and transmitting the generated control signal to an operation driver (60); the operation driver (60) turning on/off the first switching device (40) based on the control signal transmitted from the microprocessor (50); and a capacitance control unit (70) controlled through control of the microprocessor (50) and changing the capacitance (CO) between the lower electrode (10) and upper electrode (20). Shielding and exposing the lower electrode are accurately repeated at a uniform speed by controlling the switching device through a square-wave pulse of the microprocessor, so reliability of measurements obtained by the measuring sensor may be enhanced. The above references, while relevant in terms of measuring charge or electric fields in relation to air or the actual down conductor in a wind turbine, does not present ideas or tools with which a person skilled in the relevant arts would be able to combine to the present invention, where the measurements does not focus on lightning discharge events, and where measurement of the voltage potential is targeting measurement of the differences between conducting wires, and not a measurement of the voltage potential in free air.
The technical problem to be solved Detecting a broken down conductor via resistive measurement requires establishment of a conductive loop on a turbine blade. It is practically expensive, in particular for retrofit solutions, as additional wires needs to be attached to the blades for the measurement, likely on the outside of the blade. Application of a fixed return conductor will additionally present a significant risk of electrical flashover/arching due to the induced voltages during a lightning strike event, which may both lead to increased damage risk of the turbine blade, and also a high risk of the return conductor itself breaking as a result of a lightning discharge. Adding a return conductor is therefore not a viable solution.
High frequency (pulse) wave measurement systems do not need a return conductor, however such systems are complex, and therefore costly. An online monitoring solution is preferred by wind turbine operators to be able to make focused preventive maintenance and repair. This drives the need for a low cost, fairly simple fixed method 40 for determining if a down conductor is broken. The new technology A system for measuring if a down conductor is broken, may be based on a relative measurement of the conductor length between the three blades of a typical wind turbine design. This method 45 assumes that in a failed state, at least one of the down conductors presents a different galvanically connected length compared to the others, and also that the turbine is in normal operation (i.e. turbine blades are rotating). A relative measure of the connected length of a down conductor can be obtained by removing the galvanic connection at the connection point at the root of the blade, and inserting a spark gap (fig. 2) including the measurement electronics required for the present 50 invention.
Page 2 of 6
DK 2019 00839 A1 Said electronics will measure the charge flow resulting from the voltage potential difference between the down conductor of the blade and the nacelle, and thereby a measure for the potential difference itself. The nacelle is assumed well connected to the ground voltage potential. Comparing the voltage potential measurement across a full revolution of the blades will reveal if one or more blades are characterized by a low voltage potential difference. If that is the case, the down conductor is damaged, and a need for repair activities can be indicated. As the measurement methodology relies on a certain level of electric field being present in the air surrounding the wind turbine, as well as the turbine to be rotating, it is not possible to guarantee instant readout of the health state of the down conductors. However, in most practical cases a turbine will fulfil both measurement criteria on a daily or at least weekly basis. Detection logic is therefore required to both categorize at which times the relative measures for the turbine blades are valid, and for valid periods then detect if the relative measurements appear statistically different across the down conductor of each wind turbine blade.
When a lightning strike hits the receptors and down conductor, the conduction path needs to be established via the spark gap. This can be achieved, using a robust and well specified spark gap (e.g. 2kV arching threshold), and designing the measurement electronics to be able to withstand such voltage potential levels, including a reasonable safety margin. This will enable full functionality of the intended purpose of the receptors and down conductor, while leaving the measurement electronics of the present invention capable of surviving lightning strikes, and otherwise continue detecting if a down conductor is broken. The technical effect Relative measurement of the charge flow through a turbine blade, when oriented towards the sky, can be used to determine if a down conductor is broken in the blade. The electrical field between the sky and the earth potential varies significantly over time, in particular in connection with thunderstorms. Often thunderstorms pass by without any direct lightning strikes, but the increase in the electric potential is still clearly detectable. This voltage potential can be measured using existing techniques, such as KR101813851B1 described in the chapter Prior art’. If such potential differs between the blades on a turbine in normal operation (when the blades are revolving), it is a strong indicator for a damage down conductor system. Construction example To be able to measure the charge building up in the blade, it is required to have the blade nearly isolated from the ground potential, i.e. with an impedance presenting relatively high resistivity (in the MOhm range). Hereby it is practically possible to measure the voltage potential difference between the blade compared to the ground potential.
40 When separating the blade from a strong ground connection, it is important to have a controlled path for the strike current. This is obtained using a spark gap. The measurement circuit electronics must ensure that the potential difference does not exceed the spark gap arching voltage during normal operation. This will also ensure that the receptors continue 45 to present a voltage potential capable of attracting lightning discharges. Placement of a spark gap and measurement electronics for a single blade is illustrated in figure 1. The down-conductor attachment is illustrated in figure 2. The signal conditioning circuit for one blade is illustrated in figure 3. The logic unit that analyse the conditioned signals and produce an 50 evaluation result, is illustrated in figure 4.
Page 3 of 6
DK 2019 00839 A1 The complete measurement system consists of a) the down-conductor attachment, b) the blade signal conditioning, c) a logic unit calculating the condition of the blades. Description of figures Figure 1 illustrate a blade having receptors (1) at locations on the surface of the blade placed from the tip and down the length of the blade towards the root. The receptors are interconnected by a down-conductor (2). At the root end of the blade, the down-conductor is attached to the hub for further connection towards the tower and down to earth (or sea). The measurement system per blade is positioned at the root end of the blade as illustrated by (3).
Figure 2 illustrate the spark gap positioned in series with the down conductor. The spark gap ensure a conduction path for the strike and as an isolation for measurements during normal operation.
Figure 3 illustrate the measurement unit in the blade which ensures that the receptors remain close to earth voltage potential and which measures the charge condition of the blade conductor system. Figure 4 illustrate the logic unit, which is connected to all 3 blades of a turbine. The unit compares the charge condition of the blades to each other and to other blade specific data and generates an alarm if a service visit is needed to ensure proper connection of the down conductor system. The alarm may e.g. be optical, relay driven or via a digital communication line. The communication line may be wired or wireless.
Page 4 of 6

Claims (4)

Patent claims
1. A measurement system capable of detecting the relative length of a conductive wire within wind turbine blades, characterized by a system where the voltage potential generated by the surrounding atmosphere between the conductive wire and ground is measured, and via a comparison with other turbine blades is used to determine if one or more blades suffer a damaged wire system.
2. A measurement system according to claim 1, where the potential difference is measured either continuously or at discrete times via electronics allowing for measurement of the full potential build up since the last discrete measurement.
3. A measurement system according to claim 2, where a comparison of the potential difference of the blades on a turbine is used to decide if the conductive length of a wire within a single blade is shorter than at least one of the other blades.
4. A measurement system according to claim 3, where the evaluation of the potential difference is based on statistical analysis of a time series of recorded data.
Page 6 of 6
DKPA201900839A 2019-07-05 2019-07-05 System to measure the relative length of a conductive wire in wind turbine blades DK180378B1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

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DKPA201900839A DK180378B1 (en) 2019-07-05 2019-07-05 System to measure the relative length of a conductive wire in wind turbine blades

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DKPA201900839A DK180378B1 (en) 2019-07-05 2019-07-05 System to measure the relative length of a conductive wire in wind turbine blades

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DK180378B1 DK180378B1 (en) 2021-02-17

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Effective date: 20210106

PME Patent granted

Effective date: 20210217

PBP Patent lapsed

Effective date: 20230705