JoshuaG
Electrical
- Dec 3, 2014
- 3
Hi,
I wonder if any of you could explain the phenomenon behind what is happening with my phase-earth fault currents?
I’m modelling short circuit currents on ETAP, on a large 33/22/11kV network. The problem I am finding is that the phase to earth fault currents are higher when a star-delta transformer is connected downstream of a fault than when the transformer is delta-delta, star-star or no transformer is connected.
An example network with both cases is shown in the picture attached.
In both figures, Bus2 is faulted, with the only difference being the grounding of the transformer T1. The maximum P-E fault current from the supply is 20kA.
The star delta transformer seems to increase the P-E fault current beyond the ability of the supply. This extra current must be coming from the other two phases, but I don’t see the mechanism behind this.
Can anybody give me an idea as to what is causing the current from the other phases to flow into the earth? Or if this is not the case, another explanation?
Thanks in advance.
Joshua
I wonder if any of you could explain the phenomenon behind what is happening with my phase-earth fault currents?
I’m modelling short circuit currents on ETAP, on a large 33/22/11kV network. The problem I am finding is that the phase to earth fault currents are higher when a star-delta transformer is connected downstream of a fault than when the transformer is delta-delta, star-star or no transformer is connected.
An example network with both cases is shown in the picture attached.
In both figures, Bus2 is faulted, with the only difference being the grounding of the transformer T1. The maximum P-E fault current from the supply is 20kA.
The star delta transformer seems to increase the P-E fault current beyond the ability of the supply. This extra current must be coming from the other two phases, but I don’t see the mechanism behind this.
Can anybody give me an idea as to what is causing the current from the other phases to flow into the earth? Or if this is not the case, another explanation?
Thanks in advance.
Joshua