Daniel A. Rajewski
Iowa State University
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Featured researches published by Daniel A. Rajewski.
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2012
Daniel A. Rajewski; Eugene S. Takle; Julie K. Lundquist; Steven P. Oncley; John H. Prueger; Thomas W. Horst; Michael E. Rhodes; Richard L. Pfeiffer; Jerry L. Hatfield; Kristopher K. Spoth; Russell Doorenbos
Perturbations of mean and turbulent wind characteristics by large wind turbines modify fluxes between the vegetated surface and the lower boundary layer. While simulations have suggested that wind farms could significantly change surface fluxes of heat, momentum, momentum, moisture, and CO2 over hundreds of square kilometers, little observational evidence exists to test these predictions. Quantifying the influences of the “turbine layer” is necessary to quantify how surface fluxes are modified and to better forecast energy production by a wind farm. Changes in fluxes are particularly important in regions of intensely managed agriculture where crop growth and yield are highly dependent on subtle changes in moisture, heat, and CO2. Furthermore, speculations abound about the possible mesoscale consequences of boundary layer changes that are produced by wind farms. To address the lack of observations to answer these questions, we developed the Crop Wind Energy Experiment (CWEX) as a multiagency, multiuniversi...
Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy | 2015
Jeffrey D. Mirocha; Daniel A. Rajewski; Nikola Marjanovic; Julie K. Lundquist; Branko Kosovic; Caroline Draxl; Matthew J. Churchfield
Wind turbine impacts on the atmospheric flow are investigated using data from the Crop Wind Energy Experiment (CWEX-11) and large-eddy simulations (LESs) utilizing a generalized actuator disk (GAD) wind turbine model. CWEX-11 employed velocity-azimuth display (VAD) data from two Doppler lidar systems to sample vertical profiles of flow parameters across the rotor depth both upstream and in the wake of an operating 1.5 MW wind turbine. Lidar and surface observations obtained during four days of July 2011 are analyzed to characterize the turbine impacts on wind speed and flow variability, and to examine the sensitivity of these changes to atmospheric stability. Significant velocity deficits ( VD) are observed at the downstream location during both convective and stable portions of four diurnal cycles, with large, sustained deficits occurring during stable conditions. Variances of the streamwise velocity component, σu, likewise show large increases downstream during both stable and unstable conditions, with ...
Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2014
Eugene S. Takle; Daniel A. Rajewski; Julie K. Lundquist; William A. Gallus; Anupam Sharma
The Midwest US currently is experiencing a large build-out of wind turbines in areas where the nocturnal low-level jet (NLLJ) is a prominent and frequently occurring feature. We describe shear characteristics of the NLLJ and their influence on wind power production. Reports of individual turbine power production and concurrent measurements of near-surface thermal stratification are used to turbine wake interactions and turbine interaction with the overlying atmosphere. Progress in forecasting conditions such as wind ramps and shear are discussed. Finally, the pressure perturbation introduced by a line of turbines produces surface flow convergence that may create a vertical velocity and hence a mesoscale influence on cloud formation by a wind farm.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016
Daniel A. Rajewski; Eugene S. Takle; John H. Prueger; Russell Doorenbos
Recent wind-farm studies have revealed elevated nighttime surface temperatures but have not validated physical mechanisms that create the observed effects. We report measurements of concurrent differences in surface wind speed, temperature, fluxes, and turbulence upwind and downwind of two turbine lines at the windward edge of a utility-scale wind farm. On the basis of these measurements, we offer a conceptual model based on physical mechanisms of how wind farms affect their own microclimate. Periods of documented curtailment and zero power production of the wind farm offer useful opportunities to rigorously evaluate the microclimate impact of both stationary and operating turbines. During an 80-min nighttime wind farm curtailment, we measured abrupt and large changes in turbulent fluxes of momentum and heat leeward of the turbines. At night, wind speed decreases in the near wake when turbines are off but abruptly increases when turbine operation is resumed. Our measurements are compared with MODIS Terra and Aqua satellite measurements reporting wind farms to have higher nighttime surface temperatures. We demonstrate that turbine wakes modify surface fluxes continuously through the night, with similar magnitudes during the Terra and Aqua transit periods. Cooling occurs in the near wake and warming in the far wake when turbines are on, but cooling is negligible when turbines are off.. Wind speed and surface stratification have a regulating effect of enhancing or decreasing the impact on surface microclimate due to turbine wake effects.
Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2014
Daniel A. Rajewski; Eugene S. Takle; Julie K. Lundquist; John H. Prueger; Richard L. Pfeiffer; Jerry L. Hatfield; Kristopher K. Spoth; Russell Doorenbos
arXiv: Numerical Analysis | 2016
Qiang Guo; Daniel A. Rajewski; Eugene S. Takle; Baskar Ganapathysubramanian
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016
Daniel A. Rajewski; Eugene S. Takle; John H. Prueger; Russell Doorenbos
2015 AGU Fall Meeting | 2015
Daniel A. Rajewski
93rd American Meteorological Society Annual Meeting | 2013
Daniel A. Rajewski
Archive | 2010
Eugene S. Takle; John H. Prueger; Daniel A. Rajewski; Julie K. Lundquist; Matthew L. Aitken; Martha Rhodes; Adam Joshua Deppe; F. E. Goodman; Kevin Carter; Lauren R. Mattison; Shannon L. Rabideau; Allison J. Rosenberg; Charles L. Whitfield; Jerry L. Hatfield