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Offshore Wind Turbine Access Using Knuckle Boom Cranes

Kjelland, Magnus Berthelsen

Universitet i Agder / University of Agder 2016

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  • Título:
    Offshore Wind Turbine Access Using Knuckle Boom Cranes
  • Autor: Kjelland, Magnus Berthelsen
  • Assuntos: Technology
  • Notas: http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2417315
    Doctoral dissertations at University of Agder
    urn:issn:1504-9272
    IV, 78 s.
    142
    urn:isbn:978-82-7117-836-9
  • Descrição: Doktorgradsavhandling, Fakultet for teknologi og realfag, Institutt for ingeniørvitenskap, 2016 There is a great need for renewable and sustainable energy today and there are several different sources for this energy where offshore wind is one that has a great estimated planned power production. Wind power production has for many years been produced onshore, but installing the wind turbines offshore has some benefits due to higher and more stable wind conditions. The majority of installed wind turbines are today bottom fixed, but when moving to deeper waters it is too high cost in building and installing foundation, which brings the possibility of using floating wind turbines. There are, however, also challenges due to the access for both the fixed and floating offshore wind turbines. During startup, repair or maintenance there is a demand for easy access of both personnel and equipment. This dissertation mainly deals with offshore access solutions systems or parts of those systems. The access solutions are systems that transfers personnel or equipment from a floating vessel to a fixed or floating offshore structure. Work done using a small scale hydraulic manipulator is described in Papers A and B, where paper A deals with the kinematic motion control of such a small scale redundant manipulator mounted on a moving Stewart platform, imitating the motion of a floating vessel. The manipulator tries to keep the tool point at a fixed reference point by the use of the pseudo-inverse Jacobian. Used in the experimental verification is a high precision laser tracker which measures the position of the tool point. Paper B uses the same manipulator and has in addition a hanging payload attached to the tool point. A LQR control strategy is used to minimize the vibration of the hanging payload when the manipulator moves the tool point relative to a ground fixed coordinate system. Paper C is concerned with the inherent oscillatory nature of pressure compensated motion control of a hydraulic cylinder subjected to a negative load and suspended by means of a counter-balance valve. The method proposed in this paper has the focus on pressure feedback and is compared to classical control strategies. In paper D input shaping is used for the slewing motion control of a full scale mobile crane. The flexibility of the crane causes vibrations when slewing and by knowing the natural frequency and damping, the command signal is shaped so there are no residual vibrations. Experimental verification is carried out by means of a laser tracker. Finally, the work done in Paper E deals with active heave compensation from a fixed structure to a floating vessel. Modeling of the hydraulic winch is done and a frequency response function is obtained. The active heave compensation was experimentally verified using the full scale mobile crane as the fixed structure with a winch mounted on it and the Stewart platform as the moving structure. Both results from active heave compensation and constant tension are presented. The payload in the experiments is a 400kg steel structure.
  • Editor: Universitet i Agder / University of Agder
  • Data de criação/publicação: 2016
  • Idioma: Inglês

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