Dong, ESG Complete Largest Wind Turbine Piles Testing

DONG Energy and ESG have tested 28 piles on two different onshore sites in order to assist the development of new design methods for offshore wind farms. Initial results show great cost reduction potential.

The testing has been undertaken by the joint industry project PISA and was performed to assess and validate a new design method developed by the PISA academic working group led by Oxford University and including Imperial College London and University College Dublin. The academic working group supervised the testing on site, as each of the 28 piles were pulled sideways into the soil until failure.

“There’s a savings potential, that will contribute to reducing the cost of electricity.”

Alastair Muir Wood, Lead Geotechnical Engineer DONG Energy and Technical Manager for the PISA Project, said:

“(Test results) confirm that traditional design methods in these soils are very conservative. The results indicate that in these site conditions there may be opportunities for savings identified by reducing the quantity of steel in the foundation.”

The testing took place in Cowden, England and in Dunkirk, France. The clay till site in Cowden and the dense sand site in Dunkirk represent typical surface soil conditions found in much of the North Sea. Furthermore, both sites have previously been used for pile testing activities, mostly targeting oil and gas engineering, meaning that a rich amount of field and laboratory soil data is already available.

Dong, ESG Complete Largest Wind Turbine Piles Testing (2)

Bladt and Dansteel supplied piles of three different diameters for the tests; the piles with a diameter of 2 metres are some of the largest ever tested. During testing, other instrumentation was used including fibre optic strain gauges installed by Marmota Industries. In total, 28 tests were conducted primarily investigating the static monotonic but also the response under cyclic lateral loading.

The PISA academic working group now has six months to analyse the data collected and use it to confirm the new design methods. Their final report is due to be delivered to the project partners in January 2016.

This testing has been undertaken as part of the research project PISA (pile soil analysis), which is being carried out by an industry working group headed by DONG Energy and involving EDF, RWE, Statoil, Statkraft, SSE, Scottish Power, Vattenfall, Alstom and Van Oord. PISA is being run under the framework of the Carbon Trust Offshore Wind Accelerator (OWA).

Image: Dong Energy