Yo121
Electrical
- Dec 31, 2014
- 9
I'm trying to get an answer as to why use a lockout relay (LOR) on a 487B low-impedance bus differential relay that uses dynamic zone protection. In my opinion, this isn't necessary unless the utility wants someone to be forced to go to the substation and inspect the bus before resetting the LOR. Then again, some LOR's are able to be reset electronically via SCADA, without anyone going to the station to see what may have caused the fault...this is particularly advantageous for remote substations such that service could possibly be restored faster if a re-close attempt is made. In my opinion, a utility operator could accidentally close breakers on a bus, transformer, etc., if he can do it in the control room via SCADA; hence, the use for the LOR to block close the breakers until it's physically, rather than electronically, reset. Also, according to GEC Measurements, Protective Relays Application Guide, General Electric Company p.l.c. of England, 1975, the vast majority of bus faults were recorded to be an insulation flashover, at 21%; breaker failure, at 15%; switchgear insulation failure, 17%; with disconnect open or grounded and safety ground leads still left on bus after maintenance, both at 11.5%; other insulation failure (maybe mechanical failure) amounted to a mere 7% of bus faults recorded....very, very rare with the fact in mind that bus faults are very rare in the first place. So, if the breakers are re-closed without inspecting the bus, additional, possibly serious, damage could be done to the bus; however, it's not likely serious damage will be done upon re-closing and also the relay should be programmed or designed to reset automatically before a re-close is made.
It seems to me that LOR's are used to lockout buses for the following reasons: High impedance diff relay's don't have enough outputs to trip each breaker individually; high impedance diff relays MOV's cannot sustain more than maybe 4-5 cycles of secondary fault current (clamping the voltage across the high-impedance element) before MOV failure (LOR contact shunts around MOV/high-impedance relay elements); finally, LOR for bus protection are used where there's a combined tranformer/bus diff relay, where the fault could be internal to the transformer and not the bus; secondary to all these above listed requirements, again in my opinion, is requiring a person to go and inspect the bus before attempting re-closing, but I can see the use of LOR's as a safety measure for personnel on site after a bus fault occurs so they aren't shocked again if someone re-closes right after the fault...this could be mitigated by programming SCADA to block close after a bus fault, though. Keep in mind a bus fault is a major event, and I doubt most operators would simply, haphazardly close all the breakers connected to a bus, even if they could electronically reset the LOR and attempt a SCADA close on the breakers terminated on the bus.
My personal opinion on the matter is it's not necessary to lockout a bus upon a bus fault, using a low-impedance differential relay....especially the SEL-487B relay with dynamic zone selection and high-speed output contacts (LOR operates slower). Then, if a utility desires, the SCADA controls can be programmed to lockout via feedback of breaker b status contacts (52b) and an output(s) from the 487B relay (or using the relay word bits on a comm protocol like DNP3). The only time I'd voluntarily lockout a bus--if the utility or industrial substation owners didn't care one way or the other--is for high-impedance diff relays, combined transformer/bus diff protection, and breaker failure (using a breaker failure LOR). What say you and why?
It seems to me that LOR's are used to lockout buses for the following reasons: High impedance diff relay's don't have enough outputs to trip each breaker individually; high impedance diff relays MOV's cannot sustain more than maybe 4-5 cycles of secondary fault current (clamping the voltage across the high-impedance element) before MOV failure (LOR contact shunts around MOV/high-impedance relay elements); finally, LOR for bus protection are used where there's a combined tranformer/bus diff relay, where the fault could be internal to the transformer and not the bus; secondary to all these above listed requirements, again in my opinion, is requiring a person to go and inspect the bus before attempting re-closing, but I can see the use of LOR's as a safety measure for personnel on site after a bus fault occurs so they aren't shocked again if someone re-closes right after the fault...this could be mitigated by programming SCADA to block close after a bus fault, though. Keep in mind a bus fault is a major event, and I doubt most operators would simply, haphazardly close all the breakers connected to a bus, even if they could electronically reset the LOR and attempt a SCADA close on the breakers terminated on the bus.
My personal opinion on the matter is it's not necessary to lockout a bus upon a bus fault, using a low-impedance differential relay....especially the SEL-487B relay with dynamic zone selection and high-speed output contacts (LOR operates slower). Then, if a utility desires, the SCADA controls can be programmed to lockout via feedback of breaker b status contacts (52b) and an output(s) from the 487B relay (or using the relay word bits on a comm protocol like DNP3). The only time I'd voluntarily lockout a bus--if the utility or industrial substation owners didn't care one way or the other--is for high-impedance diff relays, combined transformer/bus diff protection, and breaker failure (using a breaker failure LOR). What say you and why?