Claims
- 1. An electrical fault limiter comprising:
- a first magnetic core;
- a second magnetic core opposing said first magnetic core;
- a third magnetic core adjacent the first magnetic core;
- a fourth magnetic core opposing said third magnetic core and adjacent said second magnetic core;
- a rotor disposed between the first and second magnetic cores, and the third and fourth magnetic cores, said rotor rotatable about a rotor axis, said first and second magnetic cores disposed on a first side of the rotor axis and said third and fourth magnetic cores disposed on a second side of said rotor axis;
- each core having a first axis, a second axis and a body to which the first and second axis are connected, each body having a superconduction bias coil disposed about it, each axis having a conduction load coil disposed about it, said rotor having a high magnetic reluctance sector and a return flux sector such that when the magnetomotive force from each superconduction bias coil balances with the magnetomotive force from associated load coils on an associated core there is no force on the rotor, but when the magnetomotive force from the superconduction bias coil is less than the magnetomotive force from associated load coils on the associated core then a force is produced on the rotor causing it to accelerate.
- 2. A fault limiter as described in claim 1 wherein each conduction load coil of each axis of each core has 101 turns for a nominal 600 amp current in the conduction load coils and the superconduction bias coil of each core has a height of 48 mm and a depth of 90 mm with a total coil window area of about 4.56 cm producing 121.2 KAT excitation for the primary electrical member and at least 182 KAT excitation per set of opposing cores linked to the superconduction bias coil.
- 3. A fault limiter as described in claim 1 wherein the conduction load coil is a superconduction load coil.
- 4. A fault limiter as described in claim 3 wherein the first, second, third and fourth magnetic cores comprise a primary electrical member and the rotor comprises a secondary electrical member, with the primary member arranged in a multipolar structure around a 360.degree. or smaller angle.
- 5. A fault limiter as described in claim 4 wherein the secondary member has a high magnetic reluctance zone which is disposed between the first and second cores and the third and fourth cores.
- 6. A fault limiter as described in claim 5 wherein the secondary member comprises a zoned-rotor disc having the high magnetic reluctance zone with radial dimension .alpha..sub.1, said reluctance zone comprising a solid conducting medium which is not ferromagnetic, and a return flux sector disposed adjacent the high magnetic reluctance zone, said return flux sector has radial dimension .alpha..sub.2 =.alpha..sub.1 with an equal amount of flux passing through the high magnetic reluctance zone as the return flux sector.
- 7. A fault limiter as described in claim 6 wherein each core has a radial core dimension .alpha..sub.4 essentially equal to .alpha..sub.1 and .alpha..sub.2.
- 8. A fault limiter as described in claim 5 including an air gap disposed between the primary and secondary member and each core has a magnetic flux path which is transverse and crosses the airgap between each core and the secondary member, said magnetic flux path penetrating through the secondary member and crosses the airgap to reach the respective opposing core.
- 9. A fault limiter as described in claim 8 including an AC bus circuit connected to each conduction load coil such that when current in the conduction load coils exceeds a threshold current I.sub.T, an electrodynamic reaction occurs between the primary and secondary members causing the secondary member to rotate relative to the primary member due to induced currents in the secondary member with a consequent increase in reflected impedance in the load conduction coil.
- 10. A fault limiter as described in claim 9 wherein the increase in reflected impedance after the current in the load conduction coils exceeds the threshold value is a ratio 60:1.
- 11. A fault limiter as described in claim 10 wherein the secondary member is made of an electrically conductive material which is not ferromagnetic; and including a shaft upon which the secondary member is mounted, and a reaction bar or torsion spring in connection with the shaft which transmits torque T to the reaction bar or torsion spring to limit arc movement of the secondary member to either 360.degree. or a definite integral of 360.degree. rotation.
- 12. A fault limiter as described in claim 11 wherein the secondary member also has a magnetic reluctance zone which includes a ferromagnetic insert which when moved into a spatial rotor position relative to the primary member by induction-repulsion action causes an increase in reflected impedance in the conduction load coils.
- 13. A fault limiter as described in claim 8 wherein the airgap between each core and the rotor is about 0.5 mm, the airgap between opposing cores is about 6.0 cm and the secondary electrical member has a thickness of about 5.9 cm.
- 14. A fault limiter as described in claim 8 including a high voltage line connected to each conduction load coil, and including a variable-frequency inverter connected to each superconductive bias coil to energize them, a step-down transformer connected to the variable-frequency inverter to feed the inverter, a frequency/phase controller connected to the inverter, and a current sensor which provides current input to the frequency/phase controller.
- 15. A fault limiter as described in claim 14 wherein each bias coil is operated in an AC mode at its same frequency as line voltage from the high voltage line, said inverter controlling what amount of asymmetrical component of current is fed to each bias coil to ensure control of each core under both symmetrical and asymmetrical short-circuit conditions.
- 16. A fault limiter as described in claim 15 wherein before a fault occurs bias current from the inverter feeds all the bias coils a total excitation equal to excitation produced by current I.sub.L from the high voltage line and net flux in the airgap is zero and the rotor remains stationary; and when a fault is detected by a rate of change of current I.sub.L at a di/dt value equal to or exceeding a predetermined value, a reverse bias to the bias coils is dropped, the bias current I.sub.b =0 and current I.sub.L is used to provide repulsion-induction torque on the rotor to effect a rapid change in magnetic reluctance regarding the rotor causing the rotor to rotate through an angle .theta..sub.1 in one-quarter cycle and produces a consequent low reluctance characteristic, and after the angle .theta..sub.1 is attained, the inverter changes to a rectifier mode to produce a DC bias current output for which to magnetically hold the rotor in a fixed on-state position and retain a low magnetic reluctance position.
- 17. A fault limiter as described in claim 16 wherein the excitation to the bias coils may be biased forward in an AC mode to assist the load conduction coils in accelerating the rotor and therefore change the magnetic reluctance at a faster rate than if the bias coils were not forward biased.
- 18. A fault limiter as described in claim 17 wherein the rotor is caused to reverse rotation by the frequency/phase controller removing the DC bias current and each bias coil is again excited in reverse AC bias mode to cause the rotor to reverse rotation and return it to a neutral position with a high reluctance mode.
- 19. A fault limiter as described in claim 18 wherein the primary member has a range of primary inductance of 166 to 333 .mu.H in a pre-fault mode, corresponding to series impedance of 0.062 to 0.125 ohms at 60 Hz and when in a current limiting mode, the primary member's series impedance changes to between 3.77 and 7.54 ohms on a 60 Hz base.
- 20. A fault limiter as described in claim 19 wherein the series impedance of the primary member changes from the pre-fault mode to the current limiting mode in a 4 millisecond period.
Parent Case Info
This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 08/163,434 filed on Dec. 8, 1993, now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Name |
Date |
Kind |
5355275 |
Goodier et al. |
Oct 1994 |
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Continuations (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
163434 |
Dec 1993 |
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