4.6 Article

Seismic response analysis of steel-concrete hybrid wind turbine tower

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIBRATION AND CONTROL
Volume 28, Issue 17-18, Pages 2240-2253

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/10775463211007592

Keywords

Wind turbine; time history analysis; response spectrum method; ground type; steel-concrete hybrid tower

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [51978528]

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The steel-concrete hybrid wind turbine tower, with its different material composition, shows significant differences in seismic dynamic response compared to traditional wind turbine towers. The seismic action effects analyzed through the response spectrum method are lower than those using the nonlinear time history method, indicating the necessity of time history analysis as a supplementary to seismic design.
The steel-concrete hybrid wind turbine tower is characterized by the concrete tubular segment at the lower part and the traditional steel tubular segment at the upper part. Because of the great change of mass and stiffness along the height of the tower at the connection of steel segment and concrete segment, its dynamic responses under seismic ground motions are significantly different from those of the traditional steel tubular wind turbine tower. Two detailed finite element models of a full steel tubular tower and a steel-concrete hybrid tower for 2.0 MW wind turbine built in the same wind farm are, respectively, developed by using the finite element software ABAQUS. The response spectrum method is applied to analyze the seismic action effects of these two towers under three different ground types. Three groups of ground motions corresponding to three ground types are used to analyze the dynamic response of the steel-concrete hybrid tower by the nonlinear time history method. The numerical results show that the seismic action effect by the response spectrum method is lower than those by the nonlinear time history method. And then it can be concluded that the response spectrum method is not suitable for calculating the seismic action effects of the steel-concrete hybrid tower directly and the time history analyses should be a necessary supplement for its seismic design. The first three modes have obvious contributions on the dynamic response of the steel-concrete hybrid tower.

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