The present invention relates to a method of treating an electrically insulating oil, wherein the oil comprises at least one reactive organic sulphur compound.
Insulating oils are used in a number of different apparatus in the field of electrical power transmission and electrical power generation, for example; power transformers, distribution transformers, tap changers, switchgear and reactors.
These electrically insulating oils often contain traces of reactive organic sulphur compounds, for example organic disulphides or thiols (also known as mercaptans), and these reactive sulphur compounds may react with copper or copper oxide, forming copper sulphide (Cu2S).
One possible reaction path is by copper reacting with thiols forming copper mercaptides. The copper mercaptides can decompose further, leading to the formation of copper (I) sulphide, Cu2S.
Cu2O+2RSH=>2CuSR+H2O
2CuSR=>Cu2S+RSR
where RSH is a thiol, —SH is a thiol group (or mercaptan), —R is an alkyl group and RSR is a thioether.
Other sulfurorganics, especially disulphides, can also be active, either by direct reaction with copper or via conversion to thiols.
Copper sulphide (Cu2S) is insoluble in oil and may form deposits, especially on surfaces of cellulose material (i.e. a form of paper) used to cover the copper conductors immersed in said electrically insulating oil. The copper sulphide is a semiconductor and the formation of a semiconducting deposit on the paper might lead to a degrading of the insulation properties of the paper-oil system which could lead to short circuits. These short circuits can be avoided by removing the organic disulphides from the oil and thereby preventing the formation of copper sulphide (Cu2S).
CIGRE Moscow symposium 2005 “Oil corrosion and Cu2S deposition in Power Transformers”; Bengtsson et al. describes the results of failure analysis and a laboratory reproduction of the copper sulphide Cu2S deposits on surfaces and materials in power transformers.
WO2005115082 entitled “Method for removing reactive sulfur from insulating oil” describes a method for removing sulphur-containing compounds from insulating oil by exposing the oil to at least one sulphur scavenging material and exposing the oil to at least one polar sorbent.
The described method in WO2005115082 requires the oil to be pre-treated and the method requires large amounts of sulphur scavenging material such as zinc. All the equipment needed to perform the method is similar in size to a large transformer. The process is complex, time consuming and the columns with scavenger and sorbent have to be regenerated after some processing time.
JP2001311083 describes how sulphur compounds in electrically insulation oils can be removed before the use in an electrical apparatus by storing the oil in a vessel containing copper or copper alloys. The sulphur compounds in the oil react with the copper and are thus captured and removed from the oil prior to the use in the electrical apparatus.
One embodiment of the present invention is to provide a method and apparatus by means of which an electrically insulating oil used as insulation in an electrical apparatus may be treated in order to remove reactive organic sulphur compounds and thereby prevent the formation of copper sulphide therein.
One embodiment of the invention is achieved by means of the initially defined method, characterized in that a chemical agent causing a reaction of said reactive organic sulphur compound is added to the oil. The chemical agent will induce a reaction by which the reactive organic sulphur compound is transformed into more volatile reaction products which then can be removed from the oil.
Preferably, said chemical agent comprises a halogen or a halogen compound, and according to a preferred embodiment said halogen comprises iodine (I2) or chlorine (Cl2) in elementary form and the halogen compound comprises hydrogen iodide (HI).
According to an embodiment the amount of said chemical agent added to the oil is at least equal to the amount needed for a complete reaction of said reactive organic sulphur compound into one or more reaction products.
According to an embodiment the concentration of said chemical agent in the electrically insulating oil is measured before and/or after the reaction with said reactive organic sulphur compounds and the measuring of chemical agent concentration is done by spectroscopic absorption measurement. The addition of chemical agent to the oil is controlled by said measurements.
According to an embodiment the concentration of reactive organic sulphur compounds in the electrically insulating oil is measured before and/or after the addition of said chemical agent.
Preferably the amount of said chemical agent added to the oil is the equivalent amount needed for a complete reaction of said reactive organic sulphur compounds into one or more reaction products however the exact amount of reactive organic sulphur compounds might not be exactly known but can be estimated. From this estimation the amount of chemical agent for controlling the process could be expressed as for example (g chemical agent)/(kg oil) and then the method controls the addition of chemical agent in a batch process by only adding as much chemical agent as is estimated to be necessary in the oil. In a continuous process the amount of chemical agent added to oil may be controlled dependent on the flow rate of the electrically insulating oil.
According to an embodiment of the invention a method is provided that further comprising the step of adding said chemical agent and the subsequent reaction is performed in an atmosphere with lower oxygen partial pressure than in air and this lower oxygen partial pressure can be achieved by replacing the air in the system with inert gas, for example nitrogen or by lowering the total pressure in the system or performing the reaction in reduced pressure atmosphere or vacuum.
According to an embodiment of the invention, a method comprises the step of tempering the electrically insulating oil before the addition of said chemical agent. The speed of the reaction of the chemical agent with the reactive organic sulphur compounds increases with temperature but the temperature should not be so high that the oil is affected negatively. A possible temperature range for the reaction in oil is 60-120 degrees Celsius and the preferable temperature range for the reaction in oil is 80-100 degrees Celsius.
According to an embodiment of the invention a method is provided that further comprising the step subsequent of adding said chemical agent, and after a subsequent reaction due to said addition, in which said reactive organic sulphur compounds are transformed into one or more reaction products, said one or more reaction products are removed from the electrically insulating oil.
According to an embodiment of the invention a method is provided that further comprising the step of carrying out the removal of said one or more reaction products from the electrically insulating oil by means of in part reduced pressure atmosphere or vacuum.
According to an embodiment of the invention a method is provided that further comprising the step of carrying out the removal of said one or more reaction products from the electrically insulating oil by means of injecting an inert gas such as nitrogen in the oil.
According to an embodiment of the invention the optical properties of the treated electrically insulating oil is compared with untreated oil. The electrically insulating oil can be affected by too much chemical agent or that the reaction occurs at too high temperatures and by comparing, for example, the color and/or transparency of the treated oil with the untreated oil it is possible to control the process or give an operator a warning signal.
According to an embodiment of the invention, dissolved iodine has an absorption at wavelengths that are easily distinguished from the background absorption of electrically insulation or transformer oils. The spectroscopic measurements can therefore be used for on-line control of the amount of added chemical agent.
According to an embodiment of the invention a method is provided that further comprise the step of adding an oxidation inhibitor to the electrically insulating oil subsequent to the removal of said one or more reaction products.
According to an embodiment of the invention a method is provided that further comprise the step of adding a metal passivator, adapted to prevent a formation of copper sulphide in the electrically insulating oil subsequent to the removal of said one or more reaction products.
According to an embodiment of the invention a method is provided that further comprise the step of the electrically insulating oil is comprised in an electric transformer, and that oil to be treated by means of said chemical agent is extracted from said transformer.
According to an embodiment of the invention a method is provided that further comprise the step of continuously extracting electrically insulating oil to be treated from a transformer in which the oil is located and feeding said oil through a treatment circuit and back into the transformer
According to an embodiment of the invention a method is provided that further comprise the step of carrying out in said treatment circuit at least one of the steps of; measuring the content of reactive organic sulphur compound in the oil, tempering the oil, adding said chemical agent thereto, removing formed reaction products therefrom, adding an oxidation inhibitor, adding a metal passivator.
The method according to the present invention is normally suitably used at reactive organic sulphur compound concentrations higher than 5 ppm. In some used electrically insulating oils, the concentration may be as high as several hundred ppm.
According to an embodiment of the invention, an apparatus for treating an electrically insulating oil, wherein the oil comprises at least one reactive organic sulphur compound, comprising at least one vessel, and an amount of a chemical agent, and said chemical agent comprises an elementary halogen or halogen compound and said apparatus also comprises at least one vessel adapted with means to introduce one or more amounts of the chemical agent into said electrically insulating oil.
According to an embodiment of the invention, a system for treating an electrically insulating oil, wherein the oil comprises at least one reactive organic sulphur compound, comprising; an electrical apparatus containing said electrically insulating oil, an oil treatment apparatus and means for moving the oil from said electrical apparatus to said oil treatment apparatus and said oil treatment apparatus comprises means for removing at least one reactive organic sulphur compound from the electrically insulating oil with a chemical agent comprising an elementary halogen or halogen compound.
The drawings constitute a part of this specification and include exemplary embodiments to the invention, which may be embodied in various forms. It is to be understood that in some instances various aspects of the invention may be shown exaggerated or enlarged to facilitate an understanding of the invention.
Detailed descriptions of the preferred embodiment are provided herein. It is to be understood, however, that the present invention may be embodied in various forms. Therefore, specific details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but rather as a basis for the claims and as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to employ the present invention in virtually any appropriately detailed system, structure or manner.
In block 4 the reactive organic sulphur compound (e.g. an organic disulphide with the general chemical formula; R1-S—S—R2, where R1 and R2 are general organic substituents) has reacted with the chemical agent and formed reaction products.
In block 5 the electrically insulating oil containing the volatile reaction products is exposed to a low pressure atmosphere or vacuum and the volatile reaction products as well as un-reacted chemical agent and dissolved inert gas are removed from the oil.
In block 7 the treated electrically insulating oil may undergo some final processing steps (for example, filtering, adding oxidizing inhibitor, adding metal passivator, tempering).
From a chemical agent reservoir 14 the chemical agent is mixed with the electrically insulating oil in a mixer 13 and a reaction between the reactive organic sulphur compounds and the agent occurs. The chemical agent can be mixed with inert gas (e.g. nitrogen) to assist the reaction. The oil with reaction products are then moved to a degassing unit 16 where the oil with the volatile reaction products is exposed to a low pressure atmosphere or vacuum and the volatile reaction products as well as un-reacted chemical agent and dissolved inert gas are removed from the oil. There is a possibility to add additional inert gas (e.g. nitrogen) from an inert gas source 15 to the oil during the reaction or before the degassing to assist the removal of the reaction products.
After the degassing the oil usually have to go through one or more post processing steps 17 such as filtering, adding inhibitors or stabilizers and then the oil is stored in a tank 18 for treated oil.
Preferably the amount of said chemical agent added to the oil is at least the equivalent amount needed for a complete transition of said reactive organic sulphur compounds into one or more reaction products. In this embodiment of the invention one single measurement of the amount of reactive organic sulphur compounds in the contaminated oil is needed since the concentration of reactive organic sulphur compounds in the untreated oil is constant during the whole process. The amount of chemical agent that needs to be added in the mixer 13 is constant or if the flow rate of the oil varies the amount of chemical agent is proportional to the oil flow rate.
From a chemical agent reservoir 24 the reaction agent is mixed with the electrically insulating oil in a mixer 23. The chemical agent could be in gas phase and injected into the oil in an apparatus as shown in
After the degassing the oil usually have to go through one or more post processing steps 27 such as filtering, adding inhibitors or stabilizers and then the oil fed back to the same tank 20 where it was taken form. By spectroscopic absorption measurement, the amount of chemical agent remaining in the treated oil could be monitored. An apparatus as shown in
In this embodiment of the invention the amount of reactive organic sulphur compounds in the contaminated oil is constantly changing. The change in reactive organic sulphur compound concentration will most likely follow some kind of exponential decay function, so with a few measurements or with one measurement and lots of experience the concentration of reactive organic sulphur compounds in the oil at any time during the process can be estimated. With this estimation of reactive organic sulphur compound concentration the amount of chemical agent that need to be added in the mixer 23 can be determined.
The oil passes through a column 33 where the chemical agent is located. The chemical agent can be solid crystals or granulate where, for example, the flow makes a fluidized bed or the chemical agent could be fixed to a matrix which the oil passes through. The column 33 can be of the type shown in
The column 33 can be a mixing column where gaseous chemical agent (iodine or hydrogen iodide, possibly with inert gas) is mixed with the oil.
Iodine could also be mixed into oil as a stock solution of iodine in oil. Hydrogen iodide could be added to the oil in a concentrated aqueous solution (i.e. HI dissolved in water). The water in aqueous solution added to the oil will then have to be removed e.g. by treatment of the oil in a degasser or dryer.
The oil with reaction products are then moved to a degassing unit 35 where the oil with the volatile reaction products is exposed to a low pressure atmosphere or vacuum and the volatile reaction products as well as un-reacted chemical agent and dissolved inert gas are removed from the oil. There is a possibility to add additional inert gas (e.g. nitrogen) from an inert gas source 34 to the oil during reaction or before or at the degassing to assist the removal of the reaction products.
After the degassing the oil usually have to go through one or more post processing steps 36 such as filtering, adding inhibitors or stabilizers and then the oil fed back to the same tank 30 where it was taken form.
The concentration of chemical agent (specifically iodine) in the electrically insulating oil can be measured by spectroscopic measurements. Dissolved iodine has an absorption at wavelengths that are easily distinguished from the background absorption of electrical insulation or transformer oils. The spectroscopic measurements can therefore be used for on-line control of the amount of added chemical agent or the ratio between chemical agent and inert gas added in 41. One embodiment of the present invention is to measure the absorption in the reaction volume 42. One embodiment of the present invention is to measure the absorption in the oil leaving 46 the degassing chamber 44 to ensure that concentration of chemical agent is sufficiently low.
The chemical agent injected 41 into the oil stream do not have to be in gas phase, it may also be iodine stock solution (oil based) or hydrogen iodide as a concentrated aqueous solution.
The process performed by the apparatus in
With this procedure the electrical apparatus can be online for the whole time and the apparatus 58 is always full with oil.
If the concentration of chemical agent is too high in spectroscopic measurement 68, the feeding back of oil into the electrical apparatus 60 is stopped. To bring the concentration of chemical agent down in the treated oil, the output of the second degasser 67 could be fed into the first degasser 66 until the spectroscopic measurement 68 indicates that sufficient chemical agent have been removed from the oil.
The process described in
An alternative method for dosing iodine to the oil is to pass an inert gas through the iodine crystals in e.g. a column. The resulting mix of iodine vapor and inert gas is then mixed with oil. The column might be heated to increase the amount of evaporated iodine.
Iodine can also be added into the oil as oil based stock solution with known concentration.
The chemical agent hydrogen iodide can be generated directly when it is needed to be injected in gas phase into the electrically insulating oil.
There are several ways to produce hydrogen iodide directly. By the reaction of iodine with hydrazine (N2H4) which produces hydrogen iodide and nitrogen or by hydrolysis of phosphorus triiodide (PI3) or by irradiating a mix of hydrogen and iodine gas with the wavelength of light equal to the dissociation energy of iodine (I2), about 578 nm.
The chemical agent hydrogen iodide can also be added into the oil as a concentrated aqueous solution, and then hydrogen iodide does not have to be generated directly where it is needed.
While the invention has been described in connection with a preferred embodiment, it is not intended to limit the scope of the invention to the particular form set forth, but on the contrary, it is intended to cover such alternatives, modifications, and equivalents as may be included within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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06116794.6 | Jul 2006 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP07/56975 | 7/9/2007 | WO | 00 | 1/7/2009 |