The invention relates to detecting faults in power transmission line of power transmission system, and more particularly to locating the faults based on distance protection algorithm.
Dependability and security of fault detection are important to all power transmission system in order to insure reliable economic operation of the given system. They depend on rapid detection and isolation of any fault occurring within the power transmission system. In order to quickly isolate and repair such a fault, the fault must be distinguished whether the fault occurs in the protection range. Normally, dependability means that a protection system should detect fault and isolate the fault when the fault is internal and security means the protection system should not trip or isolated the faults if it is external fault.
In general, a reliability factor K is introduced for Zone 1 setting in the line distance protection in order to cover possible errors such as current, voltage measurement errors, line parameter errors, etc. For distance protection, Zone 1 is usually set in the range of 75%-90% of total power transmission line length. For the voltage change based distance protection application, a fault detecting element may be constructed by using fault voltage change, system parameter like rated voltage of the transmission line, and a reliability coefficient like the margin. A short explanation can be provided here based on
SIR=ZS/ZSet
where ZS is source impedance for the given protected power transmission line, and ZSet is impedance setting of the transmission line. With the variance of the source impedance ZS, the SIR of the power transmission system will change accordingly.
As shown in
According to one aspect of present invention, it provides a method for detecting fault in a power transmission line of a power transmission system, including steps of:
(a) obtaining a system parameter of the power transmission system;
(b) adjusting protection reachability of a fault detecting element based on the obtained system parameter such that the adjusted protection reachability of the fault detecting element is applicable to a predetermined protection range;
(c) identifying whether there is an internal fault occurring on the transmission line using the adjusted fault detecting element; and
(d) generating a fault detection decision signal indicating the identified fault.
According to another aspect of present invention, it provides a protection system for detecting fault in a power transmission line of a power transmission system, including: a processor, being configured to adjust protection reachability of a fault detecting element based on obtained system parameter of the power transmission system such that the adjusted protection reachability of the fault detecting element is applicable to a predetermined protection range, identify whether there is an internal fault occurring on the transmission line using the adjusted fault detecting element, and generate a fault detection decision signal indicating the identified fault.
From observation of test results, it can be seen that the protection reachability of the fault detecting element varies in a reverse direction to the change of the SIR. Simulation results testified this conclusion, and the reason behind is analysed as below:
(1) The voltage change may be relatively large (for example more than 10×Rated voltage) when SIR is small (for example less than 0.1×Rated voltage), so the fault detecting element can work well for small SIR condition;
(2) With relatively large SIR value, the difference in between fault occurs at the start of the protection range and fault occurs at the end of protection range becomes smaller, it is the reason why the dependability of the fault detecting element decreases with the increase of SIR; and
(3) The voltage change is close to rated voltage for any SIR value when faults occur at the end of the protection range.
This provides the principle for adjusting the fault detecting element with different SIR value to increase the sensitivity while the reliability is ensured.
By having the solutions according to present invention, if a predetermined protection range is desirable for the fault detecting element, its protection reachability may be adjusted in consideration of the influence imposed by the SIR such that the reach point of the adjusted fault detecting element can be extended to approach the end of the predetermined protection range. Consequently, the influence on its accuracy by various SIR values can be taken into account and accordingly the fault detecting solution can remove substantial errors as a result thereof.
The subject matter of the invention will be explained in more detail in the following text with reference to preferred exemplary embodiments which are illustrated in the drawings, in which:
The reference symbols used in the drawings, and their meanings, are listed in summary form in the list of reference symbols. In principle, identical parts are provided with the same reference symbols in the figures.
While the invention is susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms, specific embodiments thereof are shown by way of example in the drawings and will herein be described in detail. It should be understood, however, that the drawings and detailed description thereto are not intended to limit the invention to the particular form disclosed, but on the contrary, the intention is to cover all modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims. Note, the headings are for organizational purposes only and are not meant to be used to limit or interpret the description or claims.
Furthermore, note that the word “may” is used throughout this application in a permissive sense (i.e., having the potential to, being able to), not a mandatory sense (i.e., must).” The term “include”, and derivations thereof, mean “including, but not limited to”. The term “connected” means “directly or indirectly connected”, and the term “coupled” means “directly or indirectly connected”.
The protection system 21 samples the current and voltage signals by sampling circuits 26 of an A/D conversion at a series of time points, and performs a fault identification, by its processor 27, for the current and voltage sampled values thus generated so as to be able to detect fault of the transmission line 20. In the event of such a fault, it may be single phase fault of short circuit between a phase and the ground, phase-phase fault of short circuit between any two phases, two phases to ground fault of short circuit between either of two phases and the ground, and three phase fault of short circuits among three phases. If the control system 21 identifies a fault, for example by its processor 27, a fault signal Sfault indicating the identified fault type is thus generated by the processor 27, which is used to initiate tripping signal to the power circuit breaker 22 so as to allow said power circuit breaker to open its switching contacts and to disconnect the line affected by the short circuit from the rest of the energy supply network. A storage circuit 28 is connected to the processor 27 for storing data.
The protection system 21 includes an input device coupled to the storage circuit 28, which in turn can communicate with the processor 27. A system parameter of the power transmission system 2, e.g. the SIR, may be introduced into the protection system 21 in any desired fashion, for example through the input device. Or, source impedance of the power transmission system ZS and impedance setting of the transmission line ZSet, may be stored in the storage circuit 28. Such information stored in the storage circuit 28 is processed by the processor 27 in cooperation with a program stored in the storage circuit 28 to calculate the SIR of the power transmission system from the equation (1) below:
SIR=ZS/ZSet (1)
where ZS is the source impedance of the power transmission system, and ZSet is impedance setting of the transmission line. Processor 27 may be of any known type and operates under the program disclosed in greater detail hereafter.
While the methods employed by the teachings of the present invention are principally described in detail for a single phase of the power transmission system, the concept of the present invention are equally applicable for multi-phase distribution systems. In such a case, the voltage and the current would be measured for each of the phases.
According to a first embodiment of present invention, the processor 27 may apply computed instantaneous voltage values at a compensated point q on the transmission line 20 to the fault detecting element for the identification of the internal fault. The algorithm for the computation will be discussed hereafter. The fault detecting element uses criteria (2):
where Uq and Uq′ respectively indicate the computed instantaneous voltage values for two of the series of time points, UN indicates rated voltage of the transmission line, and Krel indicates reliability coefficient. In the first embodiment, for example the reliability coefficient Krel may be initially set at 1.3. In this example, the criteria will be initially set as:
If it is true, then the processor 27 decides there is an internal fault with the power transmission line. Thus, the processor 27 may identify whether there is an internal fault occurring on the transmission line using the fault detecting element, and generate a fault detection decision signal indicating the identified fault.
From the observation, it can be seen that the protection reachability of the fault detecting element varies in a reverse direction to the change of the SIR. Simulation results testified this conclusion, and the reason behind is analysed as below:
(1) The voltage change ΔUq may be relatively large (for example more than 10×Rated voltage) when SIR is small (for example less than 0.1×Rated voltage), so the fault detecting element can work well for small SIR condition;
(2) With relatively large SIR value, the difference in ΔUq between fault occurs at the start of the protection range and fault occurs at the end of protection range becomes smaller, it is the reason why the dependability of the fault detecting element decreases with the increase of SIR; and
(3) The voltage change ΔUq is close to rated voltage for any SIR value when faults occur at the end of the protection range.
This provides the principle for adjusting the fault detecting element with different SIR value to increase the sensitivity while the reliability is ensured.
If a predetermined protection range is desirable for the fault detecting element, its protection reachability needs to be adjusted in consideration of the influence imposed by the SIR such that the reach point of the adjusted fault detecting element can be extended to approach the end of the predetermined protection range.
The reliability coefficient Krel of the fault detecting element is adjusted above a first threshold of 1.2 where the system parameter (SIR) is below a second threshold of 3. The reliability coefficient Krel of the fault detecting element is adjusted below the first threshold of 1.2 where the obtained system parameter is above the second threshold of 3.
As shown in
With the adjustment of the reliability coefficient Krel according to the first embodiment, the protection range of the fault detecting element for a system having SIR value 0.3 keeps unchanged indicated by the dash-line 30′ terminated at reach point RP0′, those for SIR value 0.8, 2.3, 4 are elongated indicated by the dash-line 31′, 32′, 33′ terminated at reach point RP1′, RP2′, RP3″. Since all of the reach points RP0′, RP1′, RP2′, RP3′ goes beyond the location of point A on the power transmission line, the adjusted fault detecting element for the power transmission system having SIR value of 0.3, 0.8, 2.3, 4 will give a correct fault detection decision signal. This is verified by test results and simulation results.
As an alternative, according to a second embodiment of present invention, the processor 27 may apply instantaneous voltage values at a compensated point q to the adjusted fault detecting element for the identification of the internal fault. The fault detecting element uses criteria (5):
where Uq and Uq′ respectively indicate the instantaneous voltage values for two of the series of time points, and Krel indicates reliability coefficient.
The sampling circuit 26 may sample current values and voltage values at one end of the transmission line for a series of time points. And, the processor 27 may compute and thus obtain the instantaneous voltage values at the compensate d point q on the transmission line from the current value samples and the voltage value samples based on a time domain lumped parameter differential equation based on RLC model or RL model for the transmission line for the series of time points.
The solutions explained hereinafter is used for fault direction identification using voltage fault component and current fault component at compensation point q on the transmission line 10 (as shown in
The RLC model is one of the lumped parameter model and it is an example equivalent model used for the electrical line in the present invention. The RLC model comprises a resistor, an inductor and a capacitor. In other words, the whole transmission line can be represented by an equivalent circuit containing a resistor, an inductor and a capacitor. For illustrative purposes, reference is made to
As illustrated in
The impedance of the protection zone can be denoted by Zset in fundamental frequency domain
Zset=R+jX (6)
Where Zset denotes the impedance of the protection zone, R denotes the resistance of the equivalent resistor of the transmission line and X denotes the inductance of the equivalent inductor of the transmission line. It shall be understood that although
For illustration purposes,
wherein ua represents the phase voltage of phase A; uab represents a voltage difference between the phase voltage ua and a phase voltage ub i.e., uab=ua−ub; uac represents a voltage difference between the phase voltage ua and a phase voltage uc, i.e., uac=ua−uc. Thus, the current ia′, which represents a current of phase A by removing the capacitive current impact can be determined based on the following equations.
Similarly, currents ib′, ic′ can represent phase currents by removing the capacitive current impact for phase B and phase C, respectively, and they can be determined as follows:
wherein ub represents the voltage of phase B; uc represents the voltage of phase C; uba represents the voltage difference between the phase voltage ub and the phase voltage ua, i.e., uba=ub−ua; uca represents the voltage difference between the phase voltage uc and the phase voltage ua, i.e., uca=uc−ua; ubc represents the voltage difference between the phase voltage ub and the phase voltage uc, i.e., ubc=ub−uc; ucb represents the voltage difference between the phase voltage uc and the phase voltage ub, i.e., ucb=uc−ub.
Thus, in embodiments of the present invention, it may use the current ia′, ib′, ic′, which have subtracted the capacitive currents, instead of the original sampled currents ia, ib, ic. If the capacitive currents are erased from the phase current, then the model of the transmission can be further reduced. For illustration purposes,
Based on the single line diagram as illustrated in
wherein u(t) represents the voltage at the measurement point; i(t) represents the current at the measurement point, R represents a resistance value of a resistor in the lumped parameter model, and L represents an inductance value of an inductor in the lumped parameter model and di(t)/dt represents the differential value of the current i(t). If we consider the discrete time system domain, for example a sample point at time instant k, the following equation (13′) can be used to represent the calculation in equation (13).
wherein uq_k represents the voltage at the setting point; uk represent the voltage at the measurement point; ik represents the current at the measurement point and L represents the inductance of inductor in the lumped parameter model (for example the RLC model); R represents the resistance of a resistor in the lumped parameter model (for example the RLC model); dik/dt represents the differential value of the current ik (dik=ik−ik-1; dt=a sample interval for the given sampling rate; ik-1 means the measured current at the time instantk−1 which is previous of time instant k in the discrete time domain)
wherein ua_k, ub_k and uc_k respectively represents line voltages for phase A, phase B and phase C at the measurement point; ia_k, ib_k and ic_k respectively represents currents for phase A, phase B and phase C at the measurement point; Ls represents the phase inductance for phase A, phase B and phase C; and Lm represents the inductance between phases for phase A, phase B and phase C. Since the phase to phase voltage is a voltage difference between one phase and another phase, thus the phase-to-phase voltages uq_ab_k, uq_bc_k and uq_ca_k can be further determined based on the phase voltages uq_a_k, uq_b_k and uq_c_k determined based on equation (14). For example, the voltage uq_ab_k, i.e. the voltage between phase A and B at the setting point, can determined by:
wherein uab_k, iab_k respectively represent the voltage and current between phase A and phase B at the measurement point; R and L mean a positive sequence resistance and inductance for the phase line, L equals to the difference of Ls and Lm, i.e., L=Ls−Lm.
In equation (15), R and L are positive sequence resistance and inductance, L=Ls−Lm. Similarly, the voltages uq_bc_k and uq_ca_k can be computed too. According to the differential equation (15), the phase-to-phase voltages uq_ab_k, uq_bc_k and uq_ca_k can be determined by the differential equation (16).
Equation (16) summarized the computation for these three phase-to-phase loop voltages, R and L in Equation (16) are positive sequence resistance and inductance:
wherein uab_k, iab_k respectively represents the voltage and current between phase A and phase B at the measurement point; ubc_k, ibc_k respectively represent the voltage and current between phase B and phase C at the measurement point; uca_k, ica_k respectively represent the voltage and current between phase C and phase A at the measurement point; R and L mean the positive sequence resistance and inductance for the phase line, L equals to the difference of Ls, and Lm, i.e., L=Ls−Lm. Thus, we can determine the phase voltage uq_a_k, uq_b_k and uq_c_k and the phase-to-phase voltages uq_ab_k, uq_bc_k and uq_ca_k. It shall be understood that although the phase voltages uq_a_k, uq_b_k and uq_c_k and the phase-to-phase voltages uq_ab_k, uq_bc_k and uq_ca_k are described as to be determined based on equation (14) and (16) respectively, the present invention is not limited to these embodiments. In fact, it is possible to use any suitable form of differential equations.
For the phase-ground loop, voltages uq_a_k, uq_b_k and uq_c_k at the compensation point q are computed by equation (14). Furthermore, these three voltages at the compensation point q can be computed by equation (17), R and L in Equation (17) are positive sequence resistance and inductance, the deduction process is not described here for the simplicity and clarity.
wherein R0 represents zero sequence resistance of the three-phase transmission line; R1 represents positive sequence resistance of the three-phase transmission line; L0 represents zero sequence inductance of the three-phase transmission line; L1 represents positive sequence inductance of the three-phase transmission line; i0_k, represents zero sequence current at instant k; KR represents a factor determined based on R0, R1 as indicated in equation (17); KL represents a factor determined based on L0, L1 as indicated in equation (17).
Based on the principle of time domain lumped parameter differential equation for the transmission line, instantaneous voltage values at the compensation point q can be calculated from the sampling current values and voltage values at one end of the transmission line 20 for a series of time points, including three instantaneous voltage values uq_a_k, uq_b_k and uq_c_k of phase-ground loop electric signals and three instantaneous voltage values uq_ab_k, uq_bc_k and uq_ca_k of phase-phase loop electric signals. Namely, a mathematical link can be established based on the relations between the values of the sampled electric signals measured at the measurement point 13 and computed instantaneous voltage values at the compensation point q.
Voltage fault component of any of the six electrical loops at the compensation point q for sampling instant k can be computed from any of the equations (18-1) to (18-4) as below. The six electrical loop includes phase A to ground, phase B to ground, phase C to ground, phase A to phase B, phase B to phase C, and phase C to phase A.
Δuq_k=uq_k+uq_k-N/2 (18-1)
Δuq_k=[uq_k+uq_k-N/2]−[uq_k-N+uq_k-3N/2] (18-2)
Δuq_k=uq_k−uq_k-N (18-3)
Δuq_k=[uq_k−uq_k-N]−[uq_k-N−uq_k-2N] (18-4)
wherein Δuq_k indicates the voltage fault component of any of the six electrical loops at the compensation point q for sampling instant uq_k indicates the voltage value of any of the six electrical loops at the compensation point q for sampling instant k, N indicates the number of sampling instant, preferably being equal to the number of sampling instant during the AC power system fundamental frequency cycle. In particular case such as for the electrical loop of phase A to ground, subscript “q_a” may be used in replacement of “q” in equations (18-1) to (18-4), and symbol “Δuq_k” changes to “ΔΔuq_a_k”. For the phase B to ground, phase C to ground, phase A to phase B, phase B to phase C, and phase C to phase A, “Δuq_b_k”, “Δuq_c_k”, “Δuq_ab_k”, “Δuq_bc_k”, “Δuq_ca_k” would be used in the specific scenarios.
Similarly, current fault component of any of the six electrical loops at the compensation point q for sampling instant k can be computed from any of the equations (19-1) to (19-4) as below. The six electrical loop includes phase A to ground, phase B to ground, phase C to ground, phase A to phase B, phase B to phase C, and phase C to phase A.
Δiq_k=iq_k+iq_k-N/2 (19-1)
Δiq_k=[iq_k+iq_k-N/2]−[iq_k-N+iq_k-3N/2] (19-2)
Δiq_k=iq_k−iq_k-N (19-3)
Δiq_k=[iq_k−iq_k-N]−[iq_k-N−iq_k-2N] (19-4)
wherein Δiq_k indicates the current fault component of any of the six electrical loops at the compensation point q for sampling instant k, iq_k indicates the current value of any of the six electrical loops at the compensation point q for the sampling instant k, N indicates the number of sampling instant, preferably being equal to the number of sampling instant during the AC power system fundamental frequency cycle. In particular case such as for the electrical loop of phase A to ground, subscript “q_a” may be used in replacement of “q_” in equations (19-1) to (19-4), and symbol “Δiq_k” changes to “Δiq_a_k”. For the phase B to ground, phase C to ground, phase A to phase B, phase B to phase C, and phase C to phase A, “Δiq_b_k”, “Δiq_c_k”, “Δiq_ab_k”, “Δiq_bc_k”, “Δiq_ca_k” would be used in the specific scenarios.
From the principle of electrical circuit, because the current flowing at the end of the transmission line is equal to that flowing the compensation point q, the sampling current values at the end of the transmission line can be used for the compensation point. Thus, the equations (19-1) to (19-4) can be reformulated as the equations (20-1) to (20-4).
Δiq_k=ie_k+ie_k-N/2 (20-1)
Δiq_k=[ie_k+ie_k-N/2]−[ie_k-N+ie_k-3N/2] (20-2)
Δiq_k=ie_k−ie_k-N (20-3)
Δiq_k=[ie_k−ie_k-N]−[ie_k-N−ie_k-2N] (20-4)
wherein ie_k indicates the sampled current value of any of the six electrical loops at the end of the transmission line for sampling instant k. In particular case such as for the electrical loop of phase A to ground, subscript “q_a” may be used in replacement of “q_” and “e_” in equations (20-1) to (20-4), and symbol “Δiq_k” and “Δie_k” change to “Δiq_a_k” and “Δie_a_k”. For the phase B to ground, phase C to ground, phase A to phase B, phase B to phase C, and phase C to phase A, “Δiq_b_k”, “Δie_b_k”, “Δiq_c_k”, “Δie_c_k”, “Δiq_ab_k”, “Δie_ab_k”, “Δiq_bc_k”, “Δie_bc_k”, “Δiq_ca_k”, “Δie_ca_k” would be used in the specific scenarios.
As an alternative, the instantaneous voltage values at a compensated point q on the power transmission line may be calculated based on traveling wave transmitting formula on distributed parameters of the power transmission line. Paper “Fault Phase Selector by Fault Component of Compensation Voltage Based on Traveling Wave”, LI You-yi, DONG Xin-zhou, and SUN Yuan-zhang, Automation of Electric Power Systems, 2006, 30 (8), page 37-4 thus is incorporated here for reference.
Though the present invention has been described on the basis of some preferred embodiments, those skilled in the art should appreciate that those embodiments should by no way limit the scope of the present invention. Without departing from the spirit and concept of the present invention, any variations and modifications to the embodiments should be within the apprehension of those with ordinary knowledge and skills in the art, and therefore fall in the scope of the present invention which is defined by the accompanied claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20190296543 A1 | Sep 2019 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/CN2017/088416 | Jun 2017 | US |
Child | 16440236 | US |