The invention relates to a distance relay and a method used for controlling a distance relay for protecting an electric power line in a power transmission or distribution system.
As known, a distance relay, also referred as Intelligent Electronic Device, is a device used to control and protect overhead lines and cables and designed to trip the circuit breaker when a fault or abnormal condition is detected in the protection zone of the power grid. More particularly, the purpose of the distance relays is to determine based on the zone impedance settings whether there is a fault within zone or out-of-zone, and further to determine the positive sequence impedance up to the fault position as accurately as possible, by measuring voltages and currents at relay location.
To accomplish this the user can control the relay settings via the distance relay interface by setting the line parameters according to the power line configuration. Therefore, the reach setting for each phase and ground zone of a distance relay is set based solely on positive sequence impedance between the relay and the endpoint of the line to protect. In case of phase faults, the aforementioned setting is adequate for the relay to locate the fault accurately. However, as power systems constantly evolve with changes in line configurations, this reach setting cannot guarantee correct operation of the conventional distance relays, as the line impedance is not always kept constant.
An object of the present disclosure is to provide a solution by means of which the accuracy and reliability of fault location in distance protection relays may be improved in relation to the solutions of the prior art.
The object of the disclosure is achieved by a distance protection relay and a method which is characterized by what is stated in the independent claims. The preferred embodiments of the disclosure are presented in the dependent claims.
The invention relates to a method for determining the distance to a fault location of a power line to be protected in an electric power system, wherein the method comprises steps of configuring the power line to be protected into a plurality of segments, obtaining a plurality of line settings separately for each of the plurality of segments configured, and using the line settings obtained to determine a distance to fault location of the power line to be protected, wherein the line settings include at least one of impedance, resistance, reactance, length, compensation factor, angle.
The invention relates also to a method for configuring an intelligent electronic device to protect a power line of an electric power system, wherein the configuring comprising steps of receiving, in the intelligent electronic device, a first user input to select whether the protected power line is configured with a non-segmented configuration having a single protection segment or a segmented configuration having a plurality of protection segments, identifying a selection corresponding to the first user input, based on the identifying, provided that the selection is a segmented configuration, determining the impedances of the segments of line to be protected, and calculating the impedance of the line based on the sum of the determined impedances.
The invention relates also to an intelligent electronic device for protecting of a power line of an electric power system and switching device comprising an intelligent electronic device.
In the following the invention is described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which
To measure impedance, the relay requires continuous current and voltage measurements, from the feeder current and the voltage transformers. The impedance is calculated using the following formula:
where ū is the momentary measured voltage, ī is the momentary measured current and ω0=2·π·f0 is the angular frequency. R is the resistance and X the reactance of the line. The expression Δī/Δt describes the change in momentary current divided by the change in time. This can be rewritten as a complex formula:
And as such we can extract the resistance and the reactance as the two main components of impedance.
And as such we can calculate the impedance Z as:
Z=R+iX
To calculate the impedance for faults, either loop or phase domain calculations may be utilized. An example circuit diagram, based on the loop domain method, is shown in
wherein Uphx and IPhx represents the voltage and current measured for the faulted phase, Z1 is the positive-sequence impedance of the protected line until the point of the fault, Iload is the load component, RF is the fault resistance (resistance between phase and earth at fault location) and IF is the current through that resistance RF. ZN is the return path impedance and is defined as ZN=(ZO−Z1)/3 where Z0 is the zero-sequence impedance of the line.
The protection zones are defined by impedance Z and illustrated in an R/X diagram, with the resistance on the real part of the axis and the reactance on the imaginary part of the axis, as is shown in
Let us now describe embodiments of the invention with reference to
In the segmented configuration, as described above, it is assumed, that the impedance of the line to be protected may vary over the zone to protected, in accordance with the segment impedances, with R and X, as is the case of
Referring to the scenario shown in
In response to the selection by the user, the intelligent electronic device is configured to display a view of a configuration selected, wherein said configuration comprises a list, or a table, of a plurality of segments of the line to be protected. The view in the IED may also be configured to prompt the user to provide a second user input for selecting a plurality of line settings separately for each of the plurality of segments involved for the user's selection. The line settings may include relay parameters comprising at least one of impedance Z, resistance R, reactance X, length, compensation factor, and angle.
For configuring the IED, the IED may comprise a specific tool, such as a line protection module, a user interface, a control panel, a software program or a human machine interface panel, for selecting appropriate relay parameters of the line settings according the user's preference. By means of the specific tool, the user may be provided for setting the line settings, or parameters, separately for each line to be protected, for example, for zero sequence line settings and positive sequence line settings. Said tool, or interface, may include for example, setting of relay parameters for the number of segments applied in the line configuration, setting length for each of the segments applied, setting resistance for each of the segments selected and setting reactance for each of the segments selected, compensation factors for each of the segments selected. For example, for the positive sequence line settings, the user can choose between a segmented configuration or a non-segmented configuration. If the user selects a segmented configuration, the user can further select and set the number of segments of the segmented configuration, for example, to determine whether the segments are the same length or different lengths, and to set values separately for each segment including, for example segment length, correction factor, segment resistance and segment reactance. Similarly, the user can determine and set the line settings for the zero sequence line settings.
Based on the configuration, the IED is configured to calculate the impedance based into the given line settings and parameter values, as a sum of the impedances determined for each of the segments.
To calculate the impedance for faults, in a segmented configuration, in case there are two segments until to the fault, the calculation of the fault impedance can be done as shown in
wherein Uphx and IPhx represents the voltage and current measured for the faulted phase, Z1-seg1 and Z1-seg2 are the positive-sequence impedances of the protected line until the point of the fault, Iload is the load component, RF is the fault resistance (resistance between phase and earth at fault location) and IF is the current through that resistance RF.
Instead of conventionally determining the impedance ZPh-E based on Z1, based on non-segmented method, it can now be determined based on a line segment impedance Z1-seg1, i.e. based on segmented method.
When comparing the conventional (non-segmented) method with the segmented method for setting ground or zero sequence compensation for a power line, in the conventional way of distance protection, only one compensation factor is applied to the distance relay. In conventional method, it is assumed that the entire power line to be protected is homogeneous, including the ground resistivity factors and the power line itself. By the segmented method of the present disclosure, the compensation (or correction) factors can be set separately for each segment. On a segmented configuration of the power line, the distance zone can be thought of as kilometers (or any unit of length) from a relay point, and the reactive reach can also be set in this way. For example, in the distance protection scenario shown in
In
From
The methods described above in connection with figures may also be carried out in the form of one or more computer process defined by one or more computer programs. This may be, for example, a computer program comprising computer program code means stored in storage medium adapted to perform the method of any of steps, when executed by a computer. The computer program shall be considered to encompass also a module of a computer programs, e.g. the above-described processes may be carried out as a program module of a larger algorithm or a computer process. The computer program(s) may be in source code form, object code form, or in some intermediate form, and it may be stored in a carrier, which may be any entity or device capable of carrying the program. Such carriers include transitory and/or non-transitory computer media, e.g. a record medium, computer memory, read-only memory, electrical carrier signal, telecommunications signal, and software distribution package. Depending on the processing power needed, the computer program may be executed in a single electronic digital processing unit or it may be distributed amongst several processing units.
It will be obvious to a person skilled in the art that, as the technology advances, the inventive concept can be implemented in various ways. The invention and its embodiments are not limited to the examples described above but may vary within the scope of the claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/FI2020/050185 | 3/25/2020 | WO |