Flight Anomaly Detection for Airborne Wind Energy Systems

Published in:
2020
With:
, TU Delft

Published on:
March 31st, 2020
Last modified on December 1st, 2021 at 15:17
Abstract

Airborne wind energy (AWE) systems use tethered flying devices to harvest wind energy beyond the height range accessible to tower-based turbines. AWE systems can produce the electric energy with a lower cost by operating in high altitudes where the wind regime is more stable and stronger. For the commercialization of AWE, system reliability and safety have become crucially important. To reach required availability and safety levels, we adapted an fault detection, isolation and recovery (FDIR) architecture from space industry. This work focuses on, "flight anomaly detection" layer of the FDIR. Tests verifies that proposed architecture is capable of detecting flight anomalies without generating false alarms.

Journal of Physics Conference Series, Vol. 1618, pp. 032021, 2020. doi:10.1088/1742-6596/1618/3/032021.

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