System Protection
Electrical
- Apr 13, 2023
- 71
I have proposed high voltage (230kV) loop feed, leaving the station on one terminal and coming back to the same station on a different terminal.
There are multiple distribution stations tapped on the line.
Traditionally this would have been served radially and protection would be very simple.
However, there are proposals to add breakers to each of the distribution stations to split the loop into several series line segments.
This would prevent service interruptions for line faults.
Couple issues I see here.
First the lines between stations are very short, less than half a mile.
This leaves line differentials as the only option.
However, backup coordination is going to get messy.
Overcurrent elements are way too slow.
Impedance elements will be unreliable due to the line length and regardless we will have remote stations Z2 elements racing the Z2 elements of the line section relays.
Solutions:
Keep them as two separate radially feeds with a N/O breaker/switch in between. This makes protection simple and fast with no comms necessary.
This is my preferred direction. I don't like the idea of a distribution loop possibly affecting coordination of actual transmission lines.
Or have the impedance elements of the station terminals cover the entire line with a short delay. This way the line differentials only have a short amount of time to clear the fault before the entire loop is taken out to prevent any type of backup tripping from remote stations.
Thoughts?
Figured this would be a good discussion anyway as "Line Splitting" is more common now where in the past direct tapping was the norm. Although my scenario is a bit different and something I have never seen before.
There are multiple distribution stations tapped on the line.
Traditionally this would have been served radially and protection would be very simple.
However, there are proposals to add breakers to each of the distribution stations to split the loop into several series line segments.
This would prevent service interruptions for line faults.
Couple issues I see here.
First the lines between stations are very short, less than half a mile.
This leaves line differentials as the only option.
However, backup coordination is going to get messy.
Overcurrent elements are way too slow.
Impedance elements will be unreliable due to the line length and regardless we will have remote stations Z2 elements racing the Z2 elements of the line section relays.
Solutions:
Keep them as two separate radially feeds with a N/O breaker/switch in between. This makes protection simple and fast with no comms necessary.
This is my preferred direction. I don't like the idea of a distribution loop possibly affecting coordination of actual transmission lines.
Or have the impedance elements of the station terminals cover the entire line with a short delay. This way the line differentials only have a short amount of time to clear the fault before the entire loop is taken out to prevent any type of backup tripping from remote stations.
Thoughts?
Figured this would be a good discussion anyway as "Line Splitting" is more common now where in the past direct tapping was the norm. Although my scenario is a bit different and something I have never seen before.