ABB Equipment for High-tech Ocean Simulator

Posted by Irina Tabakina

What is reported to be the world’s first circular wave and tidal current test facility is using a package of ABB electrical and control equipment, including servo drives and low voltage variable-speed drives, to simulate energetic sea-states typically found in British, European and international waters.
Located at the University of Edinburgh’s King’s Buildings campus, the $15 million ocean energy research facility comprises a 25m diameter test tank. A central floor section, 15m in diameter, lifts above the water and the facility is designed for sophisticated testing of wave and tidal energy devices and projects, fixed and floating offshore wind structures, and other marine technologies by applying scaled equivalents of waves up to 28m high and currents of up to 14 knots.
It is used for testing and de-risking marine energy technologies and projects at between 1/10th and 1/40th scale. The circular shape, ringed with absorbing wave maker paddles, means waves have no reflections, allowing multi-directional wave and current generation for sophisticated model testing of renewable energy devices.
The University awarded the main technical installation contract to Edinburgh Designs Limited. The FloWave Ocean Energy Research Facility is managed by wholly-owned University subsidiary company FloWave TT Ltd.
The ABB servo drives and motors and variable-speed drives are used to generate long-crested straight waves and fast currents, and the computer control system combines thousands of these simple sine waves together to build a fully controllable ‘random sea’ that is 99.9% representative of real sea conditions. Down either side of the tank hall 30m of marshalling cabinets, house ABB circuit breakers, contactors, relays, switches, fuses, programmable logic controllers (PLCs), servo-drives and variable-speed drives (VSDs).
The tank is encircled by a ring of 168 wave maker paddles that create and also absorb waves. Each paddle has a robust brushless AC servomotor that drives a belt running over a curved guide on the top of the paddle. The ABB BSM brushless servo motors are used to provide the full torque from zero speed with dynamic performance, as well as avoiding the wear and subsequent replacement of brushes, thereby reducing the cost of maintenance.
The velocity, position and force feedback of each paddle is controlled by its own ABB MotiFlex e100 servo drive using Ethernet PowerLink. The controller takes the signals from force transducers on the back of the paddles that sense the wave making forces. Encoders measure the paddle position and convert the signals to an algorithm that then gives instructions to the amplifiers. Ethernet Powerlink is used to give error free, high precision, real-time control from the custom controller to the amplifiers, with protection of the latter being afforded through safe stop mechanisms.
As the paddles can both make and absorb waves, the amplifiers absorb power in the incoming wave by acting as a generator. The drive system returns the energy back into the DC bus system, rather than wasting it by dumping the energy through large resistors.
Each motion control drive is fed from a common DC bus, the DC voltage of which is generated using an ABB ACSM1 drive which is linked to the AC mains supply. Rather than use a conventional front end, the amplifier runs as a line regenerative supply, thereby driving the excess energy from the DC bus back into the mains system.
Twenty-eight submerged flow-drive units simultaneously and independently drive current across the tank in any direction, with maximum current velocities of up to 1.6 meters per second through the test volume. The current mode is ideal for testing both single devices and tidal arrays, and can even be used to operate the tank like a massively wide tow tank.
Each 1.7 m diameter impellor is directly driven by a permanent magnet synchronous motor which in turn is speed controlled by a 46 kW/60 kVA, ABB industrial drive, ACS800, controlled through CANopen communications via a third party controller. The bespoke impellors can each move more than five tons of water per second.
It was important that a drive was selected which did not need any encoder feedback, so as to reduce any additional cabling or devices underwater. ABB’s direct torque control (DTC) is a sensorless motor control platform that provides the permanent magnet motors with low speed and torque accuracy, within 1% of demand; thereby recognizing the rotation without any position feedback devices. The 28 VSDs are housed in electrical cabinets situated alongside the tank. The drives are packed in close proximity within the cabinets and to help save space, a common busbar system is used to transfer the three-phase power to all of the drives. Each drive is given a different speed reference and it uses its internal logic and control systems to make the sensorless vector motors rotate at the speed needed to generate the linear profile of current in the water.
Having so many drives rated at 46 kW on a 1 MW transformer, generates multiple harmonics. Using diode bridges with a DC bus was not an effective option. For this reason, low harmonic versions of ABB industrial drives with an active front end were selected to mitigate the impact of harmonics on the mains supply.
The ABB drives are fitted with safe-torque off (STO), so if there is ever a problem within the tank, such as someone falling into the water, then the STO will cut the output to the motor.
The 15 m diameter hydraulic raiseable floor is controlled via an integrated ABB programmable logic controller (PLC), conforming to ISO 13849-1. The PLC also controls the filling of the tank and the movement of the access and instrumentation gantry using a CANbus to Ethernet link.
www.abb.com

 

(As published in the June 2015 edition of Marine Technology Reporter - http://www.marinetechnologynews.com/Magazine)
 

Marine Technology Magazine, page 20,  Jun 2015

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