Condition Monitoring of Power Electronics for Offshore Wind
- Author(s): Li Ran 1 ; Sylvia Konaklieva 1, 2 ; Paul McKeever 2 ; Philip Mawby 1
-
-
View affiliations
-
Affiliations:
1:
School of Engineering, The University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, UK;
2: Research and Development, Narec, Blyth NE24 1LZ, UK
-
Affiliations:
1:
School of Engineering, The University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, UK;
- Source:
Engineering & Technology Reference,
2014,
10pp.
DOI: 10.1049/etr.2014.0004 , Online ISSN 2056-4007 - Sectors:
Energy >
Power Electronics
Energy > Renewable Energy - Wind
Information & Communications > Cloud Computing
© The Institution of Engineering and Technology
Published
28/08/2014

Full text loading...
/deliver/fulltext/10.1049/etr.2014.0004/ETR.2014.0004.html;jsessionid=1wumt778sxk62.x-iet-live-01?itemId=%2fcontent%2freference%2f10.1049%2fetr.2014.0004&mimeType=html&fmt=ahah
Inspec keywords: circuit reliability; wind power plants; offshore installations; power convertors; power generation reliability; condition monitoring; power electronics
Other keywords: reduced frequency operation; ageing-to-failure mechanisms; offshore wind power plant; thermal cycling; power electronic converters; power generation reliability; cost-benefit analysis; power electronics condition monitoring
Subjects: Wind power plants; Power convertors and power supplies to apparatus; Power electronics, supply and supervisory circuits; Reliability
http://iet.metastore.ingenta.com/content/reference/10.1049/etr.2014.0004

Related content
content/reference/10.1049/etr.2014.0004
pub_keyword,iet_inspecKeyword,pub_concept
6
6
