doehl1
Electrical
- Jul 2, 2007
- 41
Our 13.8kV, 30MVA generator has a neutral HRG (single phase transformer w/ resistor on secondary) that is designed to allow 5A (primary) on the generator neutral during the first phase-ground fault.
Our end user on a new install is advising that their system has a nominal continuous value of charging current =~0.5A, so no issue there, the HRG will allow sufficient charging current under normal conditions.
However, they've also provided us with a calculation that indicates their system charging current rises to ~26A during a ground fault, and remains at this value for the duration of the fault. They've requested 150-200msec delay on our end to allow they're downstream ground fault devices to operate.
What happens in this case during the fault? Does the voltage drop off since the HRG won't allow that much current? Is there possibly insufficient fault current available for their downstream devices to clear the fault? Will the generator 59N protection saturate and immediately trip?
Having difficulty visualizing how this specific case manifests itself...
Our end user on a new install is advising that their system has a nominal continuous value of charging current =~0.5A, so no issue there, the HRG will allow sufficient charging current under normal conditions.
However, they've also provided us with a calculation that indicates their system charging current rises to ~26A during a ground fault, and remains at this value for the duration of the fault. They've requested 150-200msec delay on our end to allow they're downstream ground fault devices to operate.
What happens in this case during the fault? Does the voltage drop off since the HRG won't allow that much current? Is there possibly insufficient fault current available for their downstream devices to clear the fault? Will the generator 59N protection saturate and immediately trip?
Having difficulty visualizing how this specific case manifests itself...