maxljahnke
Electrical
- Jan 18, 2016
- 5
In a system consisting of 6 13.2/0.44kV 60Hz 1.75MVA transformers, fed from a 69/13.2kV 7.5MVA transformer, each having its own cubicle with a Schneider Sepam S40 protection relay, there was an event that tripped all 6 circuit breakers. The reason of the trip was "underfrequency". Settings are 59.5Hz for 22 seconds and 57Hz for 3 seconds before tripping. My questions are:
1) Considering there are no generators on the plant, we are being completely fed from the brazilian integrated system. Is it possible for a transient event to distort the frequency of the 13.2kV busbar on the plant eventhough the frequency on the infinite bus is 60Hz?
2) If not, does it make any sense to use underfrequency protection considering all the loads downstream to the 13.2/0.44kV are electric motors (no bigger than 400hp)? In other words: is it common to use the 81L parameter on MCC's?
3) Sepam's oscillography showed a voltage that had a period (between peaks) of 17ms, which results in 58.82Hz for a whole second. Is is possible for the relay to have misread the voltage eventhough its AD converter fulfills Nyquist's sampling theorem criterias?
Thanks in advance
1) Considering there are no generators on the plant, we are being completely fed from the brazilian integrated system. Is it possible for a transient event to distort the frequency of the 13.2kV busbar on the plant eventhough the frequency on the infinite bus is 60Hz?
2) If not, does it make any sense to use underfrequency protection considering all the loads downstream to the 13.2/0.44kV are electric motors (no bigger than 400hp)? In other words: is it common to use the 81L parameter on MCC's?
3) Sepam's oscillography showed a voltage that had a period (between peaks) of 17ms, which results in 58.82Hz for a whole second. Is is possible for the relay to have misread the voltage eventhough its AD converter fulfills Nyquist's sampling theorem criterias?
Thanks in advance