Abstract

The European offshore wind sector has grown rapidly, with significant advances in turbine technologies, in creased sizes, and construction locations further from the shore in deeper waters than ever before. A critical challenge has emerged relating to a growing lack of knowledge surrounding how to design foundations to support these new turbines, with the safety, life-span, cost, and environmental implications coming increasingly into question. To maintain Europe’s stance as a World-leader in offshore wind, Foundations for Offshore Wind Turbines (FRONTIErS) Doctoral Network has been designed to bring together research-intensive universities and major industry stakeholders to train the next generation of graduates with the appropriate skills to tackle the emerging issues presenting as a barrier to continued development of the sector. Eleven Doctoral Candidates have been recruited to tackle significant challenges related to foundation design and performance. Projects focus on topics such as: understanding soil variability, effect of cyclic loading on axial capacity, pile aging, dynamic modelling informed from in-situ testing, time and spatial variation in soil properties, driveability modelling, gravity-base scour effects, multi-directional loading effects, centrifuge testing of cyclic loading response, and dynamic features of wind turbine foundations. This paper presents a preliminary overview of the various PhD projects ongoing as part of this network, which are in the early stages, as well as a summary of training conducted to date.

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Published on 07/06/24
Submitted on 07/06/24

Volume Emerging technologies in site characterization for Offshore Wind Towers, 2024
DOI: 10.23967/isc.2024.001
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA license

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