mdenis8218
Electrical
- Aug 28, 2015
- 2
In the event that a transformer is subject to a catastrophic fault, one set of CTs will be exposed to very high current magnitudes which will drive them into saturation.
Is it safe to assume that since the opposing set of CTs will not enter saturation (picture a radial system), the differential relay will detect the fault and send the appropriate trip?
This seems like a no brainer to me but I can't find any documentation to confirm this...my concern is that the harmonics resulting from the saturation may cause the relay to mis-operate but it seems highly unlikely that the relay could be tricked into thinking that the currents are within tolerance for this scenario...(differential relay is an SEL 387, saturation occurs almost instantaneously)
Thanks
Is it safe to assume that since the opposing set of CTs will not enter saturation (picture a radial system), the differential relay will detect the fault and send the appropriate trip?
This seems like a no brainer to me but I can't find any documentation to confirm this...my concern is that the harmonics resulting from the saturation may cause the relay to mis-operate but it seems highly unlikely that the relay could be tricked into thinking that the currents are within tolerance for this scenario...(differential relay is an SEL 387, saturation occurs almost instantaneously)
Thanks