Current Transformer
Current Transformer
Field : EE
Group :8
Class
CT A 10P10
CT B 0.2
Switch ON S2 → S1
Switch OFF S1 → S2
20
Secondary Excitation Voltage (V)
15
10
0
20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130
18
16
Secondary Excitation Voltage (V)
14
12
10
4
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24
The knee point of an excitation curve is defined as the point at which a further increase of
10% of secondary e.m.f. would require an increment of 50% of exciting current.
CT A 20.0 V
CT B 16.6 V
(c) Burden of CT
Metering Current Transformers (CT) are rated for specified standard burdens and designed
to be highly accurate from very low current to the maximum current rating of the CT. Because of
their high degree of accuracy, these CTs are typically used by utility companies for measuring
usage for billing purposes.
Protection CTs are not as accurate as Metering CTs. They are designed to perform with a
reasonable degree of accuracy over a wider range of current. These CTs are typically used for
supplying current to protective relays. The wider range of current allows the protective relay to
operate at different fault levels.
As explained above, a measuring CT is only required to operate over the normal range of
load currents. A protection CT is employed to give satisfactory protection over a wide range of fault
conditions. This may even be many times the full load current. Therefore, the secondary winding
resistance of a protective transformer must be made as low as possible.
The 'knee-point' of the excitation curve of a CT is defined as the point at which a further
increase of 10% of secondary e.m.f. would require a 50% increment of the exciting current.
Therefore, the knee-point may be regarded as a practical limit beyond which a specified ratio may
not be maintained. A CT is considered to enter saturation beyond the knee-point. In this region
almost all the primary current is utilized to maintain the core flux.
CT Accuracy Classes
The second part of the CT Accuracy Class is a letter that designates the application for
which the CT is rated. Metering CTs are designated with the letter B. Relaying CTs have several
different letter designations.
The third part of the CT Accuracy Class is the maximum burden allowed for the CT. This is
the load that may be imposed on a transformer secondary without causing an error greater than the
stated accuracy classification.
A CT will be at risk of being destroyed if the secondary is left open circuit and the primary
current is present. The secondary of a CT must always have a burden connected; an open circuited
secondary can result in the development of a dangerously-high secondary voltage. This will cause
the insulation to fail and the winding to be short circuited. Energized but unused CT’s must be kept
short-circuited.
Differential protection is a unit scheme that compares the current on the primary side of a
transformer with that on the secondary side. Where a difference exists (other than that due to the
voltage ratio) it is assumed that the transformer has developed a fault and the plant is automatically
disconnected by tripping the relevant circuit breakers. The operating principle employed by
transformer differential protection is the Merz-Price circulating current system as shown below.
Under normal conditions I1and I2 are equal and opposite such that the resultant current through the
relay is zero. An internal fault produces an unbalance or 'spill' current that is detected by the relay,
leading to operation.
Polarity refers to the instantaneous direction of the primary current with respect to the
secondary current. All current transformers are subtractive polarity (i.e. primary and secondary
currents flow in same direction). When installing CTs for differential protection, care should be
taken to employ the right polarity. If a wrong polarity is used, information fed to the relays will be
erroneous; relays will always detect an unbalance in the system.