8-MW wind turbine tower computational shell buckling benchmark. Part 2: detailed reference solution
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Published version
Author(s)
Sadowski, Adam
Seidel, Marc
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
An assessment of the elastic-plastic buckling limit state for multi-strake wind turbine support towers poses a particular challenge for the modern finite element analyst, who must competently navigate numerous modelling choices related to the tug-of-war between meshing and computational cost, the use of solvers that are robust to highly nonlinear behaviour, the potential for multiple near-simultaneously critical failure locations, the complex issue of imperfection sensitivity and finally the interpretation of the data into a safe and economic design.
This paper presents a detailed reference solution to the computational buckling analysis of a standardised benchmark problem of an 8-MW multi-strake wind turbine support tower. Both linear and nonlinear analyses are performed, including advanced GMNIA with several different models of geometric imperfections. The crucial issue of interpreting the imperfection amplitude in a way that is compliant with the new prEN 1993-1-6 is discussed in detail. The solution presented herein is intended for use by analysts in both industry and academia for training, verification and calibration of finite element models and is intended to initiate a public repository of such computational solutions for metal civil engineering shell structures.
This paper is the second of a pair. The first paper presents a synthesis of 29 submissions to an international round-robin exercise performed on the same benchmark problem.
This paper presents a detailed reference solution to the computational buckling analysis of a standardised benchmark problem of an 8-MW multi-strake wind turbine support tower. Both linear and nonlinear analyses are performed, including advanced GMNIA with several different models of geometric imperfections. The crucial issue of interpreting the imperfection amplitude in a way that is compliant with the new prEN 1993-1-6 is discussed in detail. The solution presented herein is intended for use by analysts in both industry and academia for training, verification and calibration of finite element models and is intended to initiate a public repository of such computational solutions for metal civil engineering shell structures.
This paper is the second of a pair. The first paper presents a synthesis of 29 submissions to an international round-robin exercise performed on the same benchmark problem.
Date Issued
2023-06
Date Acceptance
2023-02-13
Citation
Engineering Failure Analysis, 2023, 148, pp.1-41
ISSN
1350-6307
Publisher
Elsevier
Start Page
1
End Page
41
Journal / Book Title
Engineering Failure Analysis
Volume
148
Copyright Statement
© 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license
(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
License URL
Identifier
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1350630723000870
Publication Status
Published
Article Number
107133
Date Publish Online
2023-02-17