bspace123
Electrical
- Sep 3, 2009
- 27
Hello
We have a 6.6kV switchboard drawing ~100A as per this single line diagram: Link
The switchboard has two sets of current transformers connected opposite in parallel, acting as a differential scheme. When current flows into and out of the board, the currents cancel and the protection relay see's no current. When there's a fault, obviously the protection relay see's the total fault current.
We observe a crackling/arcing noise at the back of the protection relay when the switchboard is online (relay is seeing very little current as there is no fault on the switchboard. This little current is expected and mainly due to CT/secondary impedance missmatch). The noise is sounding like significant voltages are being induced onto the relay CT input terminals. All connections have been checked for tightness which leads me to believe we are getting some capactive coupling through the primary/secondary of the CT's. We tried to measure the voltage with a 1000V rated multimeter. The voltage unfortunately cooked the meter, so we are unsure of what it was but it must've been >1000V. The CT STAR point is grounded at one end.
The noise dissappears when we short out either set of CT's (i.e. only one set connected to the relay).
Questions:
1. My guess is that the capacitive coupling is discharging from one set of CT's to the other. If we take one set out of the cicuit by shorting the secondaries, the capacitance has no where to discharge and hence remains in a charged state. Is this correct?
2. Is grounding both ends of the CT STAR points, the only way to remove this capacitive voltage from the relay? This is not a good idea as we may see ground loops causing maloperation of the protection relay. Can anyone suggest any other methods?
We have a 6.6kV switchboard drawing ~100A as per this single line diagram: Link
The switchboard has two sets of current transformers connected opposite in parallel, acting as a differential scheme. When current flows into and out of the board, the currents cancel and the protection relay see's no current. When there's a fault, obviously the protection relay see's the total fault current.
We observe a crackling/arcing noise at the back of the protection relay when the switchboard is online (relay is seeing very little current as there is no fault on the switchboard. This little current is expected and mainly due to CT/secondary impedance missmatch). The noise is sounding like significant voltages are being induced onto the relay CT input terminals. All connections have been checked for tightness which leads me to believe we are getting some capactive coupling through the primary/secondary of the CT's. We tried to measure the voltage with a 1000V rated multimeter. The voltage unfortunately cooked the meter, so we are unsure of what it was but it must've been >1000V. The CT STAR point is grounded at one end.
The noise dissappears when we short out either set of CT's (i.e. only one set connected to the relay).
Questions:
1. My guess is that the capacitive coupling is discharging from one set of CT's to the other. If we take one set out of the cicuit by shorting the secondaries, the capacitance has no where to discharge and hence remains in a charged state. Is this correct?
2. Is grounding both ends of the CT STAR points, the only way to remove this capacitive voltage from the relay? This is not a good idea as we may see ground loops causing maloperation of the protection relay. Can anyone suggest any other methods?