brainsalad
Electrical
- Apr 16, 2012
- 33
Greetings:
The generator neutral conductor of a HR grounded system is rated 5kV, 1/C, #2/0, 100'. In totaling the system capacitance, how can it reasoned to include the shunt capacitance of the neutral conductor? Under balanced operation, the voltage across the neutral should be zero, which shouldn't permit the shunt capacitance to charge (Vng=0). During the fault this becomes Vng = Vln, providing a charging current. Can the shunt capacitance (a zero-sequence neutral to ground) be added in parallel with those in the unfaulted phases? Thanks for your thoughts.
The generator neutral conductor of a HR grounded system is rated 5kV, 1/C, #2/0, 100'. In totaling the system capacitance, how can it reasoned to include the shunt capacitance of the neutral conductor? Under balanced operation, the voltage across the neutral should be zero, which shouldn't permit the shunt capacitance to charge (Vng=0). During the fault this becomes Vng = Vln, providing a charging current. Can the shunt capacitance (a zero-sequence neutral to ground) be added in parallel with those in the unfaulted phases? Thanks for your thoughts.