The present invention relates generally to the detection of electrical arc faults, and more particularly to a method of AC arc fault detection that uses multidimensional energy points.
This invention relates to identification of electrical arc faults and, more particularly, to a method for identifying the occurrence of AC arc events.
An arc fault is a high power discharge of electricity between two or more conductors. This discharge translates into heat, which can break down the wire insulation and possibly trigger an electrical fire. Common causes of arc faults include faulty connections due to corrosion, and degradation of electrical wiring, equipment, and related interconnections due to temperature, humidity, vibration, or other environmental conditions. In some cases degradation is simply due to aging of components over a period of time.
In view of the serious safety hazards associated with an arc fault, it is important to have the ability to quickly, reliably, and accurately detect the presence of an arc fault condition.
Prior art methods for detecting AC arc faults have relied upon an analysis of disturbances in the “current” signal. In contrast, the present invention provides an improved method of AC arc fault detection that relies upon an analysis of the “voltage” signal to detect an arc fault.
In accordance with the present invention, there is provided a method for detecting arc faults in an AC circuit, comprising: (a) measuring an AC voltage signal to obtain one cycle of the AC voltage signal; (b) obtaining a left-hand energy summation value and a right-hand energy summation value from the measured AC voltage signal, wherein the left-hand energy summation value is determined by summing left-hand energy values left of a zero-crossing and the right-hand energy summation value is determined by summing right-hand energy values right of the zero-crossing; (c) obtaining a differential left-hand energy summation value and a differential right-hand energy summation value, wherein the differential left-hand energy summation value and differential right-hand energy summation value respectively indicate changes in the left-hand energy summation value and the right-hand energy summation value; (d) obtaining a total energy summation value, wherein the total energy summation value is a sum of the left-hand energy summation value and the right-hand energy summation value; (e) determining whether both the differential left-hand energy summation value and the differential right-hand energy summation value are simultaneously inside their respective transient arc boundaries, wherein if both the differential left-hand energy summation value and the differential right-hand energy summation value are simultaneously inside their respective transient arc boundaries, then setting a potential arc flag; (f) determining whether both the left-hand energy summation value and the right-hand energy summation value are simultaneously inside stable arc boundaries, wherein if both the left-hand energy summation value and the right-hand energy summation value are simultaneously inside the stable arc boundaries, then setting a potential arc flag; (g) detecting an arc fault if a predetermined number of consecutive potential arc flags are set; and (h) repeating steps (a) through (g) a plurality of times to monitor for arc faults.
An advantage of the present invention is the provision of an AC arc fault detection method that relies upon an analysis of a voltage signal to detect an arc fault.
Another advantage of the present invention is the provision of an AC arc fault detection method that is fast, reliable, and accurate.
A still further advantage of the present invention is the provision of an AC arc fault detection method that reduces the time need to detect an AC arc fault.
These and other advantages will become apparent from the following description of illustrated embodiments taken together with the accompanying drawings and the appended claims.
The invention may take physical form in certain parts and arrangement of parts, an embodiment of which will be described in detail in the specification and illustrated in the accompanying drawings which form a part hereof, and wherein:
Referring now to the drawings wherein the showings are for the purposes of illustrating an embodiment of the invention only and not for the purposes of limiting same,
Referring now to
A window of one voltage cycle is measured (step 12), and the time instant of maximum and minimum peaks of the voltage waveform (preferably after the first millisecond) is determined (step 14). It is advantageous to omit the first millisecond of the window from consideration because when this signal is filtered (as described below) ringing will occur in this time period.
In the illustrated embodiment, one and a half cycles of the grid voltage is captured to obtain the one voltage cycle. The “truncating mark” shown in
At step 16, a zero-crossing between the maximum and minimum peaks (which denotes an axis of symmetry) is determined. The zero-crossing marker denotes the axis of symmetry that divides the left-hand and right-hand sides. Steps 12-16 are illustrated by the waveform shown in
Next, a bandpass filter is applied to the entire voltage window (step 18), as shown in
At step 18, the filtered window is truncated to between the instant between maximum and minimum peaks of the voltage waveform before the filtering, as shown in
Next, the voltage is squared at each sample point (step 22) to obtain V2 energy values, thereby providing the resulting energy waveform shown in
At step 24, a lower energy threshold and an upper energy threshold are applied. The lower and upper energy thresholds are predetermined based on a pure grid voltage signal with no arcing. In the illustrated example, the upper energy threshold is outside the bounds of the plot shown in
At step 26, the left-hand energy values (i.e., the energy values to the left of the zero-crossing) and the right-hand energy values (i.e., the energy values to the right of the zero-crossing), between the lower and upper thresholds, are respectively summed to obtain two (2) energy points (i.e., a left-hand energy summation value and a right-hand energy summation value). Data acquisition and preparation step 10 shown in
Returning now to
With reference to step 30, the left-hand energy summation value is obtained from step 10. At step 32, a differential left-hand summation energy value is determined by subtracting the current left-hand summation energy value from the prior left-hand summation energy value (i.e., the left-hand summation energy value obtained during the prior iteration of step 10). Similarly, at step 40, the right-hand energy summation value is obtained from step 10. At step 42, a differential right-hand summation energy value is determined by subtracting the current right-hand summation energy value from the prior right-hand summation energy value (i.e., the right-hand summation energy value obtained during the prior iteration of step 10). At step 50, a total energy summation value is obtained by summing the left-hand summation value and the right-hand energy summation value.
As will be discussed in further detail below, data acquisition step 10 is repeated in accordance with algorithm 5. Thus, a plurality of left-hand energy summation values (step 30), a plurality of right-hand energy summation values (step 40), and a plurality of total energy summation values (step 50) are obtained.
Referring now to steps 34, 44, and 54, it is determined whether, as a result of repeating step 10 according to algorithm 5, a sufficient number of energy summation values (i.e., left-hand energy summation values, right-hand energy summation values, and total energy summation values) have currently been obtained such that average energy summation values can be determined. If a sufficient number of energy summation values have been obtained, then average values are determined for the left-hand energy summation values, the right-hand summation values, and the total energy summation values (steps 36, 46, and 56). These average energy summation values are used to determine arc-tracking boundaries, as which will now be described in detail.
Arc-tracking boundaries for a stable arc detection region (associated with the left-hand and right-hand energy summation values) and a transit arc detection region (associated with differential left-hand and differential right-hand energy summation values) are determined based on the respective average energy summation values (steps 38, 48, and 58). It should be noted that the boundaries for stable arc detection region for both the left-hand and right-hand energy summation values are the same.
The calculations for determining (lower and upper) boundaries for establishing the stable arc detection region will now be described in detail. In accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, the stable arc detection region boundaries are calculated according to the following expression:
SAarc=V2avg±(V2avg*XSA+YSA)
where:
In accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, the upper and lower boundaries are calculated each time there are a sufficient number of new energy summation values to take another average.
The determination of boundaries for establishing the transient arc detection region for the differential left-hand energy summation values will now be described in detail. It should be noted that the determination of the boundaries for establishing the transient arc detection region for the differential right-hand energy summation values is substantially the same, however, values for differential right-hand energy summation values are substituted for differential left-hand energy summation values.
In accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, the transient arc detection region boundaries for the differential left-hand energy summation values are calculated according to the following expression:
TALarc=μV2Lavg±(ΔV2Lavg*XLTA+YLTA)
where:
The upper and lower boundaries are calculated every time there are a sufficient number of new energy summation values to take another average.
In accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, predetermined minimum and maximum limit values may be established for the upper and lower boundaries defining the transient arc detection region. In the illustrated embodiment shown in
At step 62, if both the differential left-hand energy summation value (
Referring now to
In the illustrated example embodiment of the present invention, the predetermined number of consecutive potential arc flags for detection of an arc fault is set for five (5) flags. Accordingly, when five (5) consecutive potential arcing signatures are detected, algorithm 5 determines that an arc fault has occurred (step 74). It should be appreciated that the predetermined number of consecutive flags that need to be set to detect an arc fault can set to other values in accordance with the present invention.
If multiple consecutive flags have not been detected at step 72, then algorithm 5 is repeated by returning to step 10 to acquire another set of energy summation values.
In response to detection of an arc fault at step 74, an arc flag detection signal may be activated. A visual warning or other indicator may be activated in response to activation of this arc flag detection signal.
In the given example, an arc was generated at 800 ms (on the x-axis in the graph it is tick 32). An arc fault was determined by algorithm 5 at 900 ms (on the x-axis in the graph it is tick 36). Accordingly, the time required for an arc fault detection was 100 ms for a system with 120 Vrms 60 Hz AC signal with an approximate load of 10.2 A.
The foregoing describes specific embodiments of the present invention. It should be appreciated that these embodiments are described for purposes of illustration only, and that numerous alterations and modifications may be practiced by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. It is intended that all such modifications and alterations be included insofar as they come within the scope of the invention as claimed or the equivalents thereof.
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