electrickiwi
Electrical
- Aug 14, 2012
- 14
For a 600 kVA, low-voltage grid-connected brushless synchronous generator, can loss-of-excitation be picked up reliably enough via a combination of under/over voltage and Q import limits?
My understanding is that a sudden loss of excitation (AVR fault, open-circuit field winding, etc) would result in the grid supplying reactive power to magnetise the rotor and the machine running as an induction generator, potentially open to pole-slip, stator overheating, etc.
However there must be a size of generator for which dedicated ANSI 40 protection isn't economical... Would a kVAr import limit (set just inside the generator capability curve) and suitable u/o voltage protection be sufficient cover for excitation loss?
Thanks
My understanding is that a sudden loss of excitation (AVR fault, open-circuit field winding, etc) would result in the grid supplying reactive power to magnetise the rotor and the machine running as an induction generator, potentially open to pole-slip, stator overheating, etc.
However there must be a size of generator for which dedicated ANSI 40 protection isn't economical... Would a kVAr import limit (set just inside the generator capability curve) and suitable u/o voltage protection be sufficient cover for excitation loss?
Thanks