This application is a national phase of International Application No. PCT/EP2007/063906, entitled “METHOD FOR SETTING FREE DETECTION OF OUT OF STEP CONDITION IN ELECTRICAL POWER SYSTEM”, which was filed on Dec. 13, 2007.
The invention relates to a method of determining out of step condition and a method of determining power system separation at a desired system angle within electrical power system.
Protection relays are used to detect faults and abnormal conditions on electrical power systems. Out of step condition is one of those abnormal conditions where the Power System has to be split to preserve individual islands healthy. These abnormal conditions can lead to the electrical power system becoming unstable which can cause a voltage collapse or blackout.
In order to allow remedial action to be taken it is first necessary to establish when the electrical power system has become unstable. To this end, out of step protection has traditionally been implemented using impedance blinders to measure the time it takes for the locus of measured impedance to traverse across the two blinders. This method requires a very detailed system study and generally can only detect a condition after passing the blinder on the opposite side. This method also does not give any indication of the system angle changes, hence not aiding in providing the right time (angle) to split the system.
Another known method uses the polarity of the active part of swing impedance in conjunction with rate of change of impedance and polygon characteristics to discriminate between recoverable swing and pole slips.
Yet another known method uses a high rate of change of power for predictive out of step tripping and change of polarity of active component of positive sequence resistance on entering and leaving the polygon characteristics.
Yet another known method, has a technique that uses a starting polygon which has to be set. The algorithm uses a ‘space vector estimation’ that is based on speed estimation and shape analysis of the impedance trajectories. Under swing conditions the impedance vectors describe an elliptical trajectory. By analyzing this ellipse with its estimated centre, one can also distinguish between stable and unstable swings. Any change in the trajectory shape and swing speed is recognized, enabling up to 7 Hz slip frequency detection.
The disadvantage of such approaches results from the fact that all those methods require comprehensive system studies for the out of step detection method to succeed, require some settings of parameters to be decided upon and set to operate algorithms correctly and yet within the restrictions of those settings. Thus neither of those methods is completely setting free and does not avail splitting the system at the most optimized angle.
Therefore there is a need to more accurately assess when the system is going out of step in order to be able to split the system into islands at the most optimized angle to avoid systems collapse and blackouts and also significantly reducing breaking duties of the circuit breakers during separation.
An object of the invention is a method of determining out of step condition that does not require user settings and which ensures reliable discrimination between recoverable power swing and pole slips that indicates non-recoverable power swing and the need for system separation.
An other object of the invention is a method which also allows tripping at a user selected system angle if desired.
The invention is universal in its application and is not dependant on the level of prevailing load current and the network configuration.
The essence of the invention is the fact that the change of polarity of the superimposed positive sequence current (ΔI) is compared with the change in polarity of the positive sequence resistance (ΔR) is consistently specific to stable system condition and specifically different in out of step condition. All measurements are local.
In case of the recoverable power swings the change of ΔI polarity coincides with the change of ΔR polarity, whilst during pole slip condition the ΔI changes sign and ΔR does not change its polarity.
The method according to the invention comprises the following steps:
The invention allows setting free out of step detection and system split at the favourable angle to safeguard primary equipment.
According to another aspect of the invention, the magnitude of the swing current to control the tripping at the desired angle θ is determined from the formula:
Itripping=Imax sin(θ/2),
Where:
θ—the desired system split angle selected between 240° and 270°,
Imax=maximum recorded swing current.
Other features and advantages of the invention will appear from the following description taken as a non limiting example with reference to the following drawings in witch;
From
Referring to
As shown at
The logic circuit comprises:
The apparatus mentioned above is a power system protection device, generally referred to as a protection relay.
The current and the voltage inputs are used to calculate the superimposed positive sequence current and superimposed positive sequence resistance.
Positive sequence current, positive sequence voltage and the desired tripping angle are the required inputs into the logic.
As the swing progresses, the positive sign of ΔI coincides with negative sign of ΔR and vice versa. At the peak current ΔI polarity will switch from positive to negative regardless of the nature of the swing at that point the ΔR polarity is checked and if ΔR switches polarity from negative to positive, it is a recoverable swing. If however the ΔR polarity remains negative, it is a non-recoverable swing. The maximum swing current is recorded at the point when ΔI changes polarity and is used as an indication of the maximum phase shift between two equivalent sources. At the point of time when the pole slip condition has been detected the phase shift between two sources equals 180 degrees. This peak magnitude is stored and used to calculate mathematically the exact angle between two sources. This calculated angle is then used to determine the earliest point of time when the system could be safely split after detection of out of step condition based on the criterion of this invention and tripping command can be issued. The power system must be split at favourable angle to allow divided systems to stabilize. Some operating practices require the Out-of-Step tripping when the angle between two sources (θ) is at least 240 deg and closing towards 360 deg. Some other practices, however, request the tripping at 270 deg. In any case, the Out-of-Step tripping must not be allowed when the voltages are out of phase.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention the swing current is determined in the vectorial form by
I=(Vs−Vr)/ZT
where:
Vs—Ph to N voltage at sending end,
Vr—Ph to N voltage at receiving end,
ZT—Total line impedance Zs+Zline+Zr,
where: Zs—source impedance at sending end,
Zline—line impedance,
Zr—source impedance at receiving end.
When the swing current is zero, the Vs and Vr are in phase.
When the swing current is maximum, the Vs and Vr are at 180 deg.
By monitoring the swing current changing behaviour during pole slip and having the maximum swing current recorded, it becomes possible to calculate the exact and tripping point at the desired angle θ.
Preferably the magnitude of the current to control the tripping is determined by:
Itripping=Imax sin(θ/2),
where:
θ—is the desired system split angle.
The method does not require user settings and ensures reliable discrimination between recoverable power swing and pole slips that indicates non-recoverable power swing and the need for system separation.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2007/063906 | 12/13/2007 | WO | 00 | 8/3/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2009/074181 | 6/18/2009 | WO | A |
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Entry |
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International Search Report, PCT/EP2007/063906, dated Aug. 19, 2008. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100302695 A1 | Dec 2010 | US |