Reductions in wind farm main bearing rating lives resulting from wake impingement

Quick, Julian and Hart, Edward and Binder Nilsen, Marcus and Sode Lund, Rasmus and Liew, Jaime and Huang, Piinshin and Rethore, Pierre-Elouan and Keller, Jonathan and Song, Wooyong and Guo, Yi (2026) Reductions in wind farm main bearing rating lives resulting from wake impingement. Wind Energy Science. ISSN 2366-7451 (In Press) (https://doi.org/10.5194/wes-2025-63)

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Abstract

This paper studies the impacts of wake impingement on main bearing rating lives predicted during the wind turbine design stage. A computational tool chain was developed to explore and quantify these effects across a wind farm populated by 10 MW wind turbines. Wind field and turbine load modelling was undertaken using the Dynamiks Python package, including application of a dynamic wake meandering model. The ISO 281 basic bearing rating life formulation was subsequently applied in order to evaluate impacts from wake effects. Analyses included a two-turbine parametric analysis, followed by a full wind farm analysis undertaken for the TotalControl 32-turbine reference wind farm, including full wind rose simulations across all operational wind speeds. Site conditions were accounted for using a Weibull wind speed distribution and a range of parametric wind direction rose models. Results indicate that wind farm main bearing rating lives are negatively impacted by the effects of wake impingement, resulting in rating life reductions for the analysed wind farm on the order of 16 % on average and as much as 20-25 %, both for the locating main bearing. Despite these high sensitivities, it is important to note that these resultant rating lives (i.e. the predicted lives) still far exceed the standard wind turbine operational lifetimes of 20–30 years. Wake impacts were also found to be asymmetrically related to the side on which the rotor is impinged, suggesting that, for the main bearing, there may be a “better” side for wake impingement to occur. Rating life sensitivities to wind rose shape were also observed. While these findings must be interpreted with due consideration for the various methodological limitations present, they provide compelling evidence that wake effects at the wind farm level should necessarily be included when undertaking main bearing operational load modelling, rating life assessment, or other load-related analyses.

ORCID iDs

Quick, Julian, Hart, Edward ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2322-4520, Binder Nilsen, Marcus, Sode Lund, Rasmus, Liew, Jaime, Huang, Piinshin, Rethore, Pierre-Elouan, Keller, Jonathan, Song, Wooyong and Guo, Yi;