tricard
Electrical
- Jul 9, 2008
- 38
Hi,
I have a question regarding line-ground currents and artificial neutrals.
I am modeling a solar power plant. The PV arrays' generated power is inverted and transformed onto a 27.6kV collector system which is then stepped up to 115kV to the grid. The main transformer is a 20MVA, 27.6kv-115kv Delta-Wye(solid-grounded) configuration. The Delta side has an artificial neutral provided by a zig-zag transformer, rated 2000A (2 seconds).
For a L-G fault (phase A to ground) on the 27.6kV side, I have total phase A fault current of 0.93pu (27.6kV base, 100MVA base). 0.22pu of that is contributed by the solar power plant; the remaining is from the utility. 0.93pu = 1.95kA, which would be expected with the 2000A zig/zag transformer.
For a L-G fault on the 115kV side, I have fault current of 18.16pu of which 1.14pu (115kV base, 100MVA base) is contributed from the solar farm. Therefore the solar plant's fault current contribution is greater on the 115kV side than on the 27.6kV delta side with the artificial neutral, even though the solar plants contribution will be reduced due to the transformer impedance.
I have a colleague who is curious to know why the 115kV side has greater contribution than the 27.6kV side. I believe it is because the artificial neutral on the delta side, which provides substantial zero sequence impedance, results in lower fault current on the 27.6kV side. The 115kV side is isolated from that artificial neutral, so there is far less zero sequence impedance in the primary side fault (being that the fault location was at the transformer terminals). Where I lose confidence in that statement has to do with the zig-zag transformer. Does it necessarily have to be isolated from the 115kV wye point? If it is not, will it in effect be like a Wye(solid-ground)-Wye(solid ground) connection? I have searched through IEEE 142 (green book) and IEEE 242 (buff book) to find out about systems utilizing zig-zags but they only have a little discussion (essentially stating that they can be used to create a source for zero sequence currents). Am I seeing this properly or have I missed something? Possibly it is a short coming of the analysis software...
Thanks in advance for the always informative feedback!
I have a question regarding line-ground currents and artificial neutrals.
I am modeling a solar power plant. The PV arrays' generated power is inverted and transformed onto a 27.6kV collector system which is then stepped up to 115kV to the grid. The main transformer is a 20MVA, 27.6kv-115kv Delta-Wye(solid-grounded) configuration. The Delta side has an artificial neutral provided by a zig-zag transformer, rated 2000A (2 seconds).
For a L-G fault (phase A to ground) on the 27.6kV side, I have total phase A fault current of 0.93pu (27.6kV base, 100MVA base). 0.22pu of that is contributed by the solar power plant; the remaining is from the utility. 0.93pu = 1.95kA, which would be expected with the 2000A zig/zag transformer.
For a L-G fault on the 115kV side, I have fault current of 18.16pu of which 1.14pu (115kV base, 100MVA base) is contributed from the solar farm. Therefore the solar plant's fault current contribution is greater on the 115kV side than on the 27.6kV delta side with the artificial neutral, even though the solar plants contribution will be reduced due to the transformer impedance.
I have a colleague who is curious to know why the 115kV side has greater contribution than the 27.6kV side. I believe it is because the artificial neutral on the delta side, which provides substantial zero sequence impedance, results in lower fault current on the 27.6kV side. The 115kV side is isolated from that artificial neutral, so there is far less zero sequence impedance in the primary side fault (being that the fault location was at the transformer terminals). Where I lose confidence in that statement has to do with the zig-zag transformer. Does it necessarily have to be isolated from the 115kV wye point? If it is not, will it in effect be like a Wye(solid-ground)-Wye(solid ground) connection? I have searched through IEEE 142 (green book) and IEEE 242 (buff book) to find out about systems utilizing zig-zags but they only have a little discussion (essentially stating that they can be used to create a source for zero sequence currents). Am I seeing this properly or have I missed something? Possibly it is a short coming of the analysis software...
Thanks in advance for the always informative feedback!