Principal of Power System Protection Part - 2
Principal of Power System Protection Part - 2
OF POWER SYSTEM
PROTECTION
- Part 2 -
Bob Coulter
1
Power System
Principles Protection
of Protection – Part 2
Protection Function - Components
PR Protection Relay
Bus
CB Circuit Breaker
CB CT Equip
Equip Protected Item
Tr
PR P CT Current Transformer
C
L
VT
VT Voltage Transformer
DC Aux HMI Control
Tr CB trip coil
2
Principles of Protection – Part 2
Methods of Detecting Faults
Magnitude of current – Overcurrent protection
Magnitude of current in earth or neutral – Earth Fault protection
Magnitude and Phase Angle of current – Directional Overcurrent protection
Magnitude and Phase Angle of current in earth or neutral – Directional Earth Fault
protection
Magnitude and Angle of Impedance (Ratio V/I) – Impedance protection
Difference between two or more currents – Differential protection
Difference between Phase Angles of two currents – Phase Comparison protection
Magnitude of negative sequence current
Magnitude of Voltage – Overvoltage or Undervoltage protection
Magnitude of Frequency – Over or Underfrequency protection
Temperature – Thermal protection
Specials i.e. transformer gas protection,
3
Principles of Protection – Part 2
OVERCURRENT and EARTH FAULT
PROTECTION
Bob Coulter
4
Principles of Protection – Part 2
Principle of an Overcurrent Relay
+ve
Ip Primary
current
Time Time
Operate Zone
Operate Zone
Tset
Tset
OC Phase
Ip(W)
Overcurrent
Relay
Ip(B)
EF Earth Fault
Is(B) Is(W) Is(R)
Overcurrent
OC OC OC Relay
Ip Primary fault
EF current
Is Secondary
6 current
Principles of Protection – Part 2
Current Flow for Phase -to-Phase Fault
Phase-to-Phase
CT .Current
CT
Transformer
0
OC Phase
Ip(W)
Overcurrent
Relay
Ip(B)
EF Earth Fault
Is(B) Is(W) 0
Overcurrent
OC OC OC Relay
Ip Primary fault
EF current
Is Secondary
7 current
Principles of Protection – Part 2
Current Flow for Phase -to-Earth Fault
Phase-to-Earth
CT Current
CT
Transformer
Ip(R)
OC Phase
0
Overcurrent
Relay
0
EF Earth Fault
0 0 Is(R)
Overcurrent
OC OC OC Relay
Ip Primary fault
EF current
Is Secondary
8 current
Principles of Protection – Part 2
Four -Wire Systems - 1
Four-Wire
CT Current
CT
Transformer
OC Phase
Overcurrent
Relay
Ip Primary fault
EF current
Is Secondary
9 current
Principles of Protection – Part 2
Four -Wire Systems - 4
Four-Wire
CT Current
CT
Transformer
OC Phase
Overcurrent
Relay
Is Secondary
10 current
Principles of Protection – Part 2
Setting Overcurrent Protection - 1
Load current to be carried – safety margin of 30 to 50%
11
Principles of Protection – Part 2
Load Modeling Considerations
Network loads usually recorded
as 15 or 30 minute averaged MW
values MVAr
OK for thermal, load accounting
and setting slow control scheme
purposes
12
Principles of Protection – Part 2
Statistical distribution of short-time load variation
short-time
13
Principles of Protection – Part 2
Example of short-time load variation
short-time
13.2
13
Load 12.8
MWs
12.6
12.4
12.2
12
0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000
Time in seconds
16
Power System
Principles Protection
of Protection – Part 2
Impedance or Distance Protection
Basic Arrangement of an Impedance Z< Impedance Relay
Protection Scheme
CB Circuit Breaker
CB CT Line
Line Protected Item
Tr CT Current Transformer
P VT Voltage Transformer
Z< C
L
Fault
VT DC Aux DC Auxiliary supply
Bus PCL Communications Link
DC Aux
Tr CB trip coil
18
Principles of Protection – Part 2
Impedance Measurement - Load vs Fault Discrimination - 1
A Z B
Source - ZS Line - ZL
I L
E o
VA VB a
d
E = 80 ∠0° kV (ph-n)
A Z B
Source - ZS Line - ZL
I L
E Fault o
VA VB a
d
E = 80 ∠0° kV (ph-n)
VA = 58.36∠-6.50° kV (ph-n) VB = 0 kV
A Z B
Source - ZS Line - ZL
I Fault L
E o
VA at VB a
50% d
E = 80 ∠0° kV (ph-n)
VA = 45.67∠-10.20° kV (ph-n) VB = 0 kV
A Z B
Source - ZS Line - ZL
I L
E o
VA Fault VB a
d
E = 80 ∠0° kV (ph-n)
VA = 0 kV VB = 0 kV
I = 5333∠-90.0° A Z = VA/I = 0 Ω
22
Principles of Protection – Part 2
Representation on R:X Plane – 1
V
jX V
I
θ
θ Inductive
Reactance
Real Power Flow I
into Bus from Line
-R R
Capacitive Real Power Flow
Reactance from Bus into Line
V Bus
V Line
- P +
θ
-jX I - +
θ
Z Q
I
23
Principles of Protection – Part 2
Representation on R:X Plane - 2
Bus A Bus A
B B
Line Line
P + - P
Z - + Z - +
Q
Load
Q
G
jX
Generation Load
-R R
A
24
Principles of Protection – Part 2
Polar Characteristics on R:X Plane
jX jX jX
z
z
R
θ θ
R R
jX z jX jX
X
θ
R R R
25
Elliptical Reactance Quadrilateral
Principles of Protection – Part 2
Zones of Impedance Measurement
Station Y
D
Station X Station Z
Line Z = 100Ω Zd
E A B C
Line Z = 100Ω
Ze Zg
Zf Z Za Zc
Zb
Zone 3
Time t = 1.5s
Zone 1 Zone 2 t = 1.0s
Zone 1
t = 0.5s t = 0.5s
t = 0.1s ∆t = 0.4s t = 0.1s t = 0.1s
X Y Z
80% 120% 80% Impedance
0Ω 100Ω 200Ω
26
Principles of Protection – Part 2
Impedance Measurement – Relay Connections - 1
Relay
Source Line
Location
ER1 F
IR
A
EW1 U
IW L
EB1 T
IB
VRn VWn VBn
ZL1, ZL2, ZL0 Positive, Negative and Zero Sequence Line Impedances
ZS1, ZS2, ZS0 Positive, Negative and Zero Sequence Source Impedances
Z1, Z2, Z0 Sequence Impedances to Fault: Z1=ZS1+ZL1, Z2=ZS2+ZL2, Z0=ZS0+ZL0
VRn, VWn, VBn Phase-to-Neutral Voltages at Relay Location
IR, IW, IB Phase Currents at Relay Location
ER1, EW1, EB1 Phase-to-Neutral Source Voltages: Note EW1= α2ER1 and EB1= αER1
27
Principles of Protection – Part 2
Impedance Measurement - Fault Resistance - 1
A Z B
Source - ZS Line - ZL
I
E
VA Fault R VB
A Z B
Source - ZS Line - ZL
I Fault
E VA VB
R at
50%
A Z B
Source - ZS Line - ZL
I
E
VA R Fault VB
A Z B
Source - ZS Line - ZL
I L
E o
VA Fault R VB a
d
A Z B
Source - ZS Line - ZL
I Fault L
E o
VA R at VB a
50% d
A Z B
Source - ZS Line - ZL
I L
E o
VA R Fault VB a
d
Z Z Z Z
Zone 1: A to B Zone 1
Zone 1 A Zone 1: B to A B
Zone 2
Zone 3
Left End of Line (20%) Centre 60% of Line Right End of Line (20%)
Faults Cleared in Zone 1 Faults Cleared in Faults Cleared in Zone 1
time from A (≅ 0.1s) Zone 1 time (≅ 0.1s) time from B (≅ 0.1s)
and Zone 2 time (≅ 0.5s) at A and B and Zone 2 time (≅ 0.5s)
from B from A
34
Principles of Protection – Part 2
DIFFERENTIAL
PROTECTION
PRINCIPLES
35
Power System
Principles Protection
of Protection – Part 2
Basic Current Differential Protection – External Fault
Is1 N1 Is2
∆I
Current
|I|>0
Measuring Relay
N2
Is1 Is1 Is2 Is2
Protected
Equipment
Ip1 CT 1 CT 2 Ip2
∆I
|I|>0 Current
Measuring Relay
N2
Is1 Is1 Is2 Is2
Protected
Equipment
Ip1 CT 1 CT 2 Ip2
If Fault
∆I
|I|>0 Current
Measuring Relay
N2
Is1 Is1 Is2 = 0
Protected
Ip2 = 0
Equipment
Ip1 CT 1 CT 2
If Fault
∆I
Current Measuring
|I|>0
Relay
N2
Is1 Is1 Is2 Is2
Protected
Equipment
Ip1 CT 1 CT 2 Ip2
If High Impedance
Fault
Consider ideal current transformer performance:
If = (Ip1- Ip2) > 0
Therefore Is1 ≠ Is2
Therefore ∆I = Is1- Is2 ≠ 0, magnitude of I> 0
39 Current measuring relay operates
Principles of Protection – Part 2
Basic Current Differential Protection – Internal Fault 4
Is1 N1 Is2
∆I
|I|>0 Current Measuring
Relay
N2
Is1 Is1 Is2 Is2
Short-circuited
Ip1 CT 1 turns CT 2 Ip2
Protected Equipment
Vs1 Vs2
Vs1 Vs2
Xm
Is1 N2 Is2
Xm
Protected
Equipment
Ip1 CT 1 CT 2 Ip2
Xm = Magnetising reactance of current transformer, note this is non-linear
Rc = resistance of current transformer RL = secondary circuit wiring resistances
secondary winding
Z = Input impedance of current measuring Iset = Current setting of measuring relay
relay
Note: Operating criteria for protection now |I|≥Iset instead of |I|>0
44
Principles of Protection – Part 2
Principle of Biased Current Differential Relay
k[Is1+Is2]
C
k Is1-Is2
Is1 Is2
1 1
1 1
Is1-Is2
Is1 Is2
Is1 Is1 Is2 Is2
Protected
Equipment
Ip1 CT 1 CT 2 Ip2
C is a current magnitude comparator - operates for │Is1-Is2│ ≥ │k[Is1+Is2]│
k[Is1+Is2[ input is called “restraint” or “bias” input, [Is1-Is2] input is called
“operate” input. k is less than 0.5, typically 0.1 to 0.4,and is called the
45 bias setting.
Principles of Protection – Part 2
Biased Current Differential Relay – External Fault
k[Is1+Is2]
C
k Is1-Is2
Is1 Is2
1 1
1 1
Is1-Is2
Is1 Is2
Is1 Is1 Is2 Is2
Protected
Equipment
Ip1 CT 1 CT 2 Ip2
Ip1 = Ip2
Is1 and Is2 will be similar in magnitude and phase therefore
Is1-Is2 will be small and Is1+Is2 will be large.
│Is1-Is2│ < │k[Is1+Is2]│so no operation
46
Principles of Protection – Part 2
Biased Current Differential Relay – Internal Fault 1
k[Is1+Is2]
C
k Is1-Is2
Is1 Is2
1 1
1 1
Is1-Is2
Is1 Is2
Is1 Is1 Is2 Is2
Protected
Equipment
Ip1 CT 1 If Fault CT 2 Ip2
Primary fault current If = Ip1+Ip2
Is1-Is2 will be large and Is1+Is2 will be small.
│Is1-Is2│ > │k[Is1+Is2]│so operation achieved
47
Principles of Protection – Part 2
Biased Current Differential Relay – Internal Fault 2
k[Is1]
C
k Is1
Is1 0
1 1
1 1
Is1
Is1
Is1 Is1 0 0
Protected
Equipment Ip2=0
Ip1 CT 1 If Fault CT 2
∆I WΦ Relay
∆I RΦ Relay
R R
Protected
W W
Equipment
B B
R
N W
B
Protected Equipment