Guojin Si , Tangbin Xia , Dong Wang , Nagi Gebraeel , Ershun Pan , Lifeng Xi
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Wind power continues to be the fastest-growing source of renewable energy, with offshore wind development playing a crucial role globally. However, one significant challenge is the inadequate capacity of offshore wind ports, which may lead to delays in installation and maintenance plans. Existing operations and maintenance (OAM) frameworks generally overlook constraints imposed by limited port and vessel availability, focusing primarily on the effects of unrestricted resources on maintenance schedules. To address this issue, this article proposes a novel resource-centered maintenance strategy (RCMS) that incorporates the impact of various resource conditions on opportunistic maintenance scheduling and multi-type vessel routing. Unlike traditional health-centered maintenance strategies, the RCMS quantifies the opportunities emerging from dynamic wind speeds. By leveraging day-ahead predictions of wind speeds and wave heights, the port activation and the collaborative dispatching of multi-type vessels from different ports are optimized, ensuring timely maintenance execution while achieving flexible resource allocation. Accordingly, both the positive and negative impacts of resources (weather conditions, service vessels, and OAM ports) are considered. Experimental results show that for offshore wind farm clusters with multiple ports, the RCMS can reduce overall transportation costs by 74.6 %, 0.9 %, and 6.1 % compared to the easy-to-implement and two fixed port strategies.
期刊介绍:
Applied Energy serves as a platform for sharing innovations, research, development, and demonstrations in energy conversion, conservation, and sustainable energy systems. The journal covers topics such as optimal energy resource use, environmental pollutant mitigation, and energy process analysis. It welcomes original papers, review articles, technical notes, and letters to the editor. Authors are encouraged to submit manuscripts that bridge the gap between research, development, and implementation. The journal addresses a wide spectrum of topics, including fossil and renewable energy technologies, energy economics, and environmental impacts. Applied Energy also explores modeling and forecasting, conservation strategies, and the social and economic implications of energy policies, including climate change mitigation. It is complemented by the open-access journal Advances in Applied Energy.