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Over Voltage Protection

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Title: Over Voltage Protection


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Over Voltage Protection

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Protection
  • There are two areas of protection which power
    engineers deal with
  • Over Current
  • Over Voltage

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  • We all have had dealings with over current
    protection if fact we have a whole group that
    deals with it.
  • But very few of us deal with over voltage
    protection. Why well simplistically currents are
    a function of load and impedance of the system
    and that can be pretty much anything
  • But even though there appears to a lot of
    voltages in reality there are only about 20 to 30
    which means once you have provided protection for
    these voltages you can use it again and again and
    dont have to re engineer. Example for 12kv we
    use insulation rated 110kV BIL and an arrester
    rated 10kV. This means the 12kV at State College
    uses the same over voltage protection as the 12kV
    at Parkersburg or Colorado for that matter.

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Over voltage Protection verses Insulation
coordination
  • This course was titled insulation coordination
    not over voltage protection
  • That is true but insulation coordination is a
    subset of over voltage protection. So what we
    are going to learn is the entire area of over
    voltage protection.
  • What is insulation coordination

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Insulation Coordination
  • Insulation Coordination developed before
    arresters were developed.
  • Insulation coordination basically is that you
    want the cheaper insulation to fail before the
    more expensive insulation and in doing so its
    failure shorts out the over voltage and thereby
    protects the more expensive insulation.

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Example
  • Air insulation is cheaper than paper and oil
    insulation used in transformers, not only that
    but after a failure of air insulation and the
    over voltage and power follow current is removed,
    fresh air re establishes the insulation level so
    the circuit can be re energized. If an insulator
    flashes over it is the air that broke down. If
    this insulator is next to a transformer, the air
    insulation broke down (creating a fault and
    shorting the over voltage to ground ) before the
    insulation in the transformer failed. Therefore
    the failure of the insulator protected the more
    expensive transformer. And when the fault was
    cleared fresh air went around the insulator and
    everything could be returned back to normal

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  • In the early days this was all they had so proper
    insulation coordination was necessary
  • But when arrester technology started to appear,
    arresters could protect both the insulator and
    the transformer so it was not as important to
    remember the method of insulation coordination.
  • In fact it became just a standard that on a given
    voltage you place a given arrester and things
    will work. As arresters became better even
    manufactures tended to loose site of the
    insulation coordination principles and just
    designed their equipment to be protected by
    arresters.
  • However there are problems with that. For
    example you want the phase to ground insulation
    on a switch or breaker to fail before the phase
    to phase insulation. As this provides protection
    to workers working past an open switch or breaker

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  • So for us to understand completely we need to
    know proper insulation coordination and proper
    application of surge arresters. Thus we need to
    know over voltage protection.

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Lets look at insulation
  • Insulation whether air, oil, paper, varnish,
    vacuum, silicon used in electronics all has the
    same type of pattern. That is shorter the time
    of the over voltage is applied to the insulation
    the greater the value of that over voltage the
    insulation can withstand.

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Insulation curve

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Lets understand where overvoltages come from
  • First you have normal voltages, which means that
    the insulation system has to withstand these
    stresses continuously.
  • Then you have overvoltages that are caused by a
    number of things such as transients, 60 Hertz
    overvoltages. Etc.
  • We covered a lot of what causes Overvoltages in
    the Transient class

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  • So our insulation system has to be able to
    withstand
  • Normal system voltage continuously
  • Over Voltages produced by transients or the
    system. These include
  • A. Lightning
  • B. Switching
  • 1. Cap switching
  • 2. Faults
  • 3. Long Line Switching
  • C. Ferroresonance
  • D. High system voltage

Many of these overvoltages can be controlled in
magnitude by grounding, switching resistors,
synchronous close,etc. Or the insulation must be
designed to handle the maximum overvoltage or a
surge arrester applied to remove the overvoltage.
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Proper Insulation Coordination
If lightning strikes the phase conductor and it
generates enough voltage to flash the insulation
I want it flashing over the cheapest, self
restoring insulation first and I want it to go to
ground
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Proper Overvoltage protection if Lightning
strikes the bus
If you have an overhead shield wire
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If Lighting strikes you want it to hit the shield
wire.
For a switching surge you want it to be removed
by the surge Arrester
Otherwise you want your insulation to be
coordinated so that it flashes the cheapest self
restoring insulation first.
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Types of Insulation
  • Insulation can be described as a dielectric with
    the job to preserve the electrical integrity of
    the system.
  • Insulation can be in
  • A. Internal
  • B. External

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Internal Insulation
  • Is the internal solid, liquid, or gas elements of
    the insulation of the equipment, which are
    protected from the effects of atmospheric and
    other external conditions such as contamination,
    humidity, and animals.
  • Transformer insulation, cable insulation, gas
    insulated substation, dielectric fluid in
    capacitors, oil, etc.

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External Insulation
  • Air insulation and the exposed surfaces of solid
    insulation equipment, which are both subjected to
    dielectric stresses and to the effects of
    atmospheric and other external conditions such as
    contamination, humidity, and animals.
  • Examples are Bushings, bus support insulators,
    switches, air, etc.
  • Can be affected by the environment by such things
    as rain, altitude, winds, dirt, etc.

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Characteristics of Insulation Strength
  • Non Self Restoring- An insulation that losses
    its insulating properties or does not recover
    them completely, after a disruptive discharge.
    Paper such as on a transformer winding. Under
    ground cable insulation
  • Self Restoring- Insulation that completely
    recovers its insulating properties after a
    disruptive discharge. Air

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  • Internal insulation is typically non self
    restoring insulation and is usually defined in
    terms of Convention withstand
  • External insulation is typically self restoring
    insulation and is usually defined in terms of
    Statistical withstand

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How do you define insulation strength
  • Conventional- The strength of the insulation
    described in terms of the voltage it is able to
    withstand without failure or disruptive discharge
    under specified test conditions.
  • Statistical- The strength of the insulation
    described in terms of the voltage it is able to
    withstand with a given probability of failure or
    disruptive discharge under specified test
    conditions

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60 Hz peak
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We can see that for the same spacing a rod gap
flashes over at a lower voltage than a sphere
gap. So geometry makes a difference. So just
because the spacing to ground is less than the
spacing line to load on an air switch does not
necessarily mean that the switch when impulsed
will flash to ground first(we want it to), it
depends on how the switch components look. If
line to load looks more like a rod gap and line
to ground looks more like a sphere gap then it is
possible even though the switch as a greater line
to load spacing than line to ground it will flash
line to load first. The only way to be sure is
to test it.
Spacing here is greater than distance here
So you would think it will flash here first, but
it depends on how the switch looks.
This could look like a sphere gap
This could look like a rod gap
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Notes from John Paserba - Mitsubishi
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