Embodiments of the present invention relate to determining the location of an electrical disturbance in one or more circuits which may be caused, for example, by a fault, such as a short circuit, an open circuit, or by a lightning strike.
In many applications, a single power source is connected to a plurality of electrical loads. For example, in an aircraft a single power source may supply various loads such as cockpit instruments, air supply, environmental controls, etc. A short circuit or open circuit wiring fault may cause an electrical arc to occur resulting in further damage. All, or large parts, of the circuit may be closed down to prevent damage being caused to the various parts of the circuit as it is not generally known from which part of the circuit the electrical disturbance originates. However, it is desirable to not have to close down all, or large parts, of the circuit in the event of an electrical disturbance. This is especially true if an external electrical event, such as lightning, is mistaken for an arc fault, resulting in erroneous disconnection of fully operational circuits.
According to an embodiment of the present invention, an apparatus for determining the location of an electrical disturbance in a circuit is provided. The apparatus has at least one sensor configured to determine the relative phase of current and voltage waveforms across the circuit inductance of a portion of the circuit produced by a voltage or current perturbation and a controller configured to identify the location of the electrical disturbance within the circuit from the relative phase of the current and voltage waveforms.
According to another embodiment of the present invention, a circuit is provided. The circuit comprises a power source, at least one distribution leg comprising a load, and at least one apparatus for determining the location of an electrical disturbance in a circuit. The apparatus comprises at least one sensor configured to determine the relative phase of current and voltage waveforms across the circuit inductance of a portion of the circuit produced by a voltage or current perturbation, and a controller configured to identify the location of the electrical disturbance within the circuit from the relative phase of the current and voltage waveforms. The apparatus is configured to identify the location of an electrical disturbance within the power source portion or the at least one distribution leg.
According to another embodiment of the present invention a method for determining the location of an electrical disturbance in a circuit is provided. The method comprises determining the relative phase of current and voltage waveforms across the circuit inductance of a portion of the circuit produced by a voltage or current perturbation in the circuit and identifying the location of the electrical disturbance within the circuit from the determined relative phase of current and voltage waveforms in that portion of the circuit.
An embodiment of the present invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
If a fault is introduced into the distribution leg 1 of the circuit, the power source 20 may experience periodic voltage perturbations. The fault may, for example, be a result of a short circuit, open circuit or lightning event and may produce an arc which may be in series with the load or may arc to ground across the load resulting in a parallel arc. The load may have a complex, unknown impedence that may be represented as a parallel resistance R and capacitance C as illustrated in
A convenient method of determining the relative phase of the voltage and current waveforms across the inductance L1 of the distribution leg 1 during an electrical disturbance is by calculating the sign (positive or negative) of the inductance L1 of the distribution leg 1. If VS, I and VC (the voltage across the capacitive component C of the load) are known, for example by measurement, then the inductance L1 of the distribution leg 1 can be calculated from the formula:
where VL=VS−VC
VC is not measured. As the average voltage across the inductance L1 of the distribution leg 1 is zero, VC can be approximated by a low pass filtered version of VS shown as VC′.
When the inductance L1 of the distribution leg 1 is calculated from VS, VC′ and I, it has been found that perturbations occurring outside the distribution leg 1 result in a positive value for L1 while perturbations occurring within distribution leg 1 result in a negative value for L1. Determining the sign (positive or negative) of the value of L1 while the voltage and/or current are perturbed, enables the location of the electrical disturbance being either within the distribution leg 1, or externally of the distribution leg 1, to be determined. The controller 30, which may be housed within the switch 40 or separately from the switch or the entire circuit 10, for example in an external control system, microprocessor or computer, could measure VS and I, and calculate VC′ and L1, and thus determine the presence of a fault or arc within the distribution leg 1.
In order to reduce the likelihood of errors, for example from electrical noise within the circuit, additional filtering and/or event counting can be included to gain confidence in the detection of the presence of a fault in a particular distribution leg 1. That distribution leg may then be isolated for example by the controller 30 arranging for the opening of switch 40 via control line 33.
The inductance L1 of the distribution leg 1 and the approximated value of the voltage across the capacitive component of the load VC1 can be determined using the equations provided below. The equations are presented in discrete time and the annotation n, n−1 denote the latest and previous values of a perimeter through successive calculation cycles;
A=(1−k)(VS(n)−VC′(n−1))
where k is a filter constant with a typical value of approximately 0.1;
where t is the sample time interval; and
V
C′(n)=VS(n)−A
When used in a circuit 10 with a plurality of distribution legs 1,2 . . . N as shown in
An indication of the location of an electrical disturbance within a circuit, for example whether on the load side or source side of a circuit and/or within which one of a number of distribution legs may result in isolation of that part of the circuit such that the remainder of the circuit may continue in operation. An indication of the part of the circuit which suffered the electrical disturbance may also be provided to a user, such as on a display panel or graphical user interface such that a user is able to examine that part of the circuit which experienced the electrical disturbance.
Being able to determine the location of an electrical disturbance, for example within a particular distribution leg from a plurality of distribution legs connected to a single power source, enables just the leg affected by the electrical disturbance to be isolated. The remaining portions of the circuit, such as various other loads for other components and the power source may continue in operation. This provides better availability of the overall electrical network such that it is more reliable.
Determining the relative phase of current and voltage waveforms across the circuit inductance produced by a voltage or current perturbation provides a reliable indicator of the location of the electrical disturbance, even in electrically noisy environments.
If, in a particular distribution leg, a current waveform produced by an electrical disturbance is before a voltage waveform, then the location of the electrical disturbance can be identified as being in that particular distribution leg. That particular distribution leg may then be isolated, for example using a switch. If the current waveform produced by an electrical disturbance is not before the voltage waveform, then the location of the electrical disturbance can be identified as being elsewhere, for example on the power source side of the circuit or in another distribution leg.
The relative phase of the current and voltage waveforms across the circuit inductance may be determined by calculating the sign (positive or negative) of the inductance at a particular point in the circuit.
Many variations may be made to the examples described above whilst still falling within the scope of the present invention. For example, the relative phase of current and voltage waveforms across the circuit inductance produced by a voltage or current perturbation may be determined by any appropriate technique, such as by comparison of times at which the voltage and current peaks occur as an alternative to determining the sign (positive or negative) of the inductance within the distribution leg. Furthermore, the controller 30 may be provided by any appropriate technique such as a component provided within the circuit or within the switch mechanism 40 and/or may at least partly be provided by one or more components external to the circuit 10 which may or may not include a microprocessor or computer.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1200986.6 | Jan 2012 | GB | national |