METHOD OF SUBSYNCHRONOUS RESONANCE DETECTION

Information

  • Patent Application
  • 20120303306
  • Publication Number
    20120303306
  • Date Filed
    February 04, 2011
    13 years ago
  • Date Published
    November 29, 2012
    11 years ago
Abstract
The subject of the invention is a method of subsynchronous resonance detection in electrical power systems with series capacitors. Voltage signals are measured on line and by using finding zero crossing points of discrete signal of measured voltage, positive and negative half cycles of the wave form of discrete signal of voltage are calculated in a computer device to which constant parameters are delivered by the user. The inventive method comprises the following actions: creating a demodulated signal (UDem) of voltage by adding the minimum value of negative half cycle of the wave form of discrete processed signal (UX) of voltage to the maximum value of positive half cycle of the wave form of discrete processed signal of voltage (UX) for time intervals having a signal length (TL), where (TL) is a constant parameter, delivered by the user,calculating a root mean square value (RMS) for demodulated signal of voltage UDem and comparing it with the value of another constant parameter delivered by the user as the level of root mean square value (RMSLev) and when the value of (RMS) is smaller than the value of (RMSLev) it indicates that there is no subsynchronous resonance, and when the value of RMS is bigger than the value of (RMSLev), the presence of subsynchronous resonance is identified by the determination of voltage amplitude (AFss) of subsynchronous resonance and/or frequency (fFss) of subsynchronous resonance.
Description

The subject of the invention is a method of subsynchronous resonance detection in electrical power systems with series capacitors.


In general, the subsynchronous resonance phenomenon SSR (SubSynchronous Resonance) occurs in electrical power systems as a result of the interaction of a turbine-generator with a long-distance series compensated transmission line. There is a condition of an electrical power system where electrical networks exchange energy with the mechanical system of the generator at frequencies less than the nominal frequency of the transmission line (50 or 60 Hz).


Subsynchronous resonance is addressed in three categories, the induction generator effect, torsional interaction and torque amplification. The first two types are caused by a steady state disturbance, while the third is excited by transient disturbances.


Series capacitors enhance the capabilities of power electrical systems by compensating transmission line inductance thus increasing the capacity of lines and thereby improving steady state and transient stability limits. However, the use of series capacitors increase the risk of occurrence of the subsynchronous resonance phenomenon. Typically, the frequency of subsynchronous resonance has a value in the range 15%-90% of the nominal frequency of the transmission line.


The known methods of detecting subsynchronous resonance SSR are based on filtering techniques or an analysis of generator shaft vibration. Another method is known from U.S. Pat. No. 4,607,217. Subsynchronous resonance is detected in an AC electrical power supply system by determining changes in the length of successive wave-form half cycles which are the basis for identifying subsynchronous resonance. The parameter change measured is the wave period, and changes in the ratio of the difference of the period of positive and period of negative half cycles over the sum of the period positive and the period of negative half cycles are related to the detection of subsynchronous resonance. The invention is based on the observation that subsynchronous frequency in the current line creates a longer half cycle and shorter half cycles. The difference between the half cycle periods is measured successively to provide a method of detecting the presence of subsynchronous resonance.


A disadvantage of this method is the presence of a time delay between the appearance of the subsynchronous resonance phenomenon and its detection. This time delay may be too long for SSR frequency detection, which may result in damage to the shaft or maloperation of the transmission line protection relay. This disadvantage is overcome by the invented method which allows SSR detection and identification faster in comparison to known techniques and requires the use of small sample amount of input data than in known solutions.


The essence of the inventive method of subsynchronous resonance detection in electrical power systems with series capacitors, in which voltage signals are measured on line and by using a method of finding zero crossing points of discrete signal of measured voltage, positive and negative half cycles of a wave form of discrete signal of voltage are calculated in a computer device to which constant parameters are delivered by the user, is that it includes the following actions:

    • creating a demodulated signal of voltage UDem by adding minimum value of negative half cycle of the wave form of discrete processed signal of voltage UX to maximum value of positive half cycle of the wave form of discrete processed signal of voltage UX for time intervals having a signal length TL, where TL is a constant parameter, delivered by the user,
    • calculating a root mean square value RMS for demodulated signal of voltage UDem and comparing it with the value of another constant parameter delivered by the user as the level of root mean square value RMSLev and when the value of (RMS) is smaller than the value of RMSLev it indicates that there is no subsynchronous resonance, and when the value of RMS is bigger than the value of RMSLev, the presence of subsynchronous resonance is identified by the determination of voltage amplitude AFss of subsynchronous resonance and/or frequency fFss of subsynchronous resonance.


Preferably during finding zero crossing, two hystereses for positive and negative half cycles of the wave form are established for the determination of sequences of consecutive time intervals TPoz1, TNeg1, . . . TPozN, TNegN, respectively for positive UPoz and negative UNeg part of discrete processed signal UX between zero crossings in order to create the upper envelope Eup and the lower envelope Elow of discrete processed signal UX.


Preferably the absolute value of hysteresis for positive and negative half cycles of the wave form is equal to the root mean square value level RMSLev.


Preferably the voltage signal length TL has a time value in the time domain of minimum 0.2 s.


A computer program for detection of subsynchronous resonance in electrical power systems with series capacitors, which computer program is loadable in and executable on a data processing unit of a computer device (8), and which computer program when being executed by the data processing unit of the computer performs the method according to claims 1-4.





The method according to the present invention is explained on the basis of an embodiment presented in the drawing, where:


FIG. 1—shows schematically an electrical power system with series capacitors and with a generator,


FIG. 2—shows a waveform of power system voltage with subsynchronous resonance frequency before a demodulation,


FIG. 3—shows a waveform of discrete processed signal,


FIG. 4—shows a waveform of demodulated signal with subsynchronous resonance frequency,


FIG. 5—shows a flowchart of operations performed while detecting subsynchronous resonance according to the invention.





The electrical power system for the implementation of the inventive method is presented in FIG. 1. The electrical power system comprises a turbine-generator 1, which forms a mechanical part of the system, and three-phase AC transmission lines connected to the turbine-generator, which together with an HV transformer 2, the impedances 3 of the lines, series capacitors 4, and end consumers 5 of the power systems form an electrical part of the power system. To each phase of the three-phase transmission lines, between the transformer 2 and the series capacitors 4, a capacitor voltage transformer CVT 6 is connected for measuring the voltage of lines U1, U2, U3. Each of the CVT transformers 6 is connected through a communication link 7 with a device for detecting and identify subsynchronous resonance phenomenon 8 in the electrical part of the power system. The device 8 is a computer with a processor unit for implementation of the method of detecting SSR and it may be a part of a protective relay or it may be a computer device installed separately to the system. The device 8 includes an analogue-digital converter 9 for converting the measured analogue signal into a digital signal, a subsynchronous resonance-detecting unit 10 for detecting SSR in transmission lines, a calculation unit 11 and a storage unit 12 for calculating and gathering data processed during the operation, and external peripheral devices 13 for visualising the results of SSR detection. The analogue-digital converter 9 for converting the measured analogue signal into a digital signal may be installed in a CVT transformer 6 instead in the device 8, which is not shown in the drawing.


The method according to the invention is realized as depicted in FIG. 5 in the following steps.


Step S1

Determination of Discrete Signal UD from Measured Online Signal U.


The voltage signal U1, U2, U3 of transmission line is measured by the CVT transformer 6 and converted into a discrete signal UD in the analogue-digital converter 9. The discrete signal UD consists of voltage value ai of i consecutive samples. For the conversion process, some constant parameters are delivered to the analogue-digital converter 9, and the conversion process is well known in the art.


The first constant parameter delivered to the analogue-digital converter 9 is the sampling frequency Fs. This parameter defines the number of samples per second taken from the analogue signal U (signal U is presented in FIG. 2 as the wave form). Usually the sampling frequency is set as 1 kHz minimum, which is also a default setting for the presented invention. Settings of a lower sampling frequency may result in incorrect calculation.


The second constant parameter delivered to the analogue-digital converter 9 is the signal length TL. This parameter presented in FIG. 2 defines the length of an analogue voltage signal U taken for analogue-digital conversion. To produce reliable results of future next steps the value of signal length TL should be equal to one period of the lowest subsynchronous frequency which can appear in the electrical power system. In the embodiment of the invention the value was set as minimum TL=0.2 [s], which corresponds to 5 Hz of subsynchronous frequency of a transmission line. Settings of shorter signal length TL may result in incorrect calculation.


The third constant parameter delivered to the analogue-digital converter 9 is a root mean square value RMSLev which defines the statistical magnitude of the discrete signal UD. The RMSLev value should be equal to the amplitude of the noise level of the CVT transformer 6, which is known for each specific CVT. In future next steps this parameters allows to distinguished noise from the discrete signal UD.


Step S2

Calculation of Discrete Processed Signal UX and Determination of Zero Crossing Points in Order to Calculate Sequences TPoz1, TNeg1, . . . TPozN, TNegN, of Time Intervals Respective for Positive UPoz and Negative UNeg Part of Discrete Processed Signal UX Between Zero Crossings Points.


First an arithmetic mean value Xmean of discrete signal UD for signal length TLFIG. 2 is calculated as follows:










X
mean

=



a
1

+

a
2

+








a
i








+

a
n


n





(
1
)







where ai is the voltage value of sample i and n is the number of all samples in the discrete signal UD. The number of samples n is equal to the sampling frequency Fs multiplied by signal length TL.


Then discrete processed signal UX is calculated by subtracting mean value Xmean from the voltage value ai of every sample point of the discrete signal UD. If there is no subsynchronous resonance, the discrete processed signal UX maps the dominant nominal frequency of the transmission line. If there is subsynchronous occurrence, the discrete processed signal UX consists of the nominal frequency of the transmission line and subsynchronous frequency components.






U
X
=a
i
−X
means  (2)


for i=1 . . . n .


Then the zero crossings points are identified by detecting changes in the discrete processed signal UX sign (+) or (−)—FIG. 3. Always there are two types of zero crossings. One of them is when the signal value is increasing—positive zero crossing, the other when the signal value is decreasing—negative zero crossing. The positive zero crossing (arrow B) is detected when a discrete processed signal UX changes its value from minus to plus and when its value is bigger than the positive hysteresis value established as the value of the root mean square value RMSLev which is known for each specific CVT 6, marked in FIG. 3 as D. The negative zero crossing (arrow C) is detected when a discrete processed signal UX changes its value from plus to minus and when its value is smaller than the negative hysteresis value established as a minus value of the root mean square value RMSLev which is known for each specific CVT 6, marked in FIG. 3 as E. The hystereses D and E are established in order to avoid mixing zero crossing with noise which always appears in signals collected from real electrical power systems.


After finding the first zero crossing point, which can be positive or negative, the next zero crossing point, which is negative or positive respectively, is found, the time interval TPoz1 or TNeg1 between this zero crossing points is determined as an interval for calculating the positive part UPoz (marked in FIG. 3 as dashed line) or the negative part UNeg (marked in FIG. 3 as continuous line) relative to the discrete processed signal UX. Sequences of consecutive time intervals TPoz1, TNeg1, . . . TPozN, TNegN, respectively for the positive UPoz the negative UNeg part of discrete processed signal UX between zero crossings are the result of this step.


Step S3
Calculation of a Demodulated Signal UDem.

First for each TPoz1, . . . , TPozN, of time intervals respectively for positive UPoz from the signal length equal to the value of TL, the maximum values of the discrete processed signal UX are calculated and then from the values of such maxima the upper envelope Eup of the discrete processed signal UX is created.


Similarly for each TNeg1, . . . , TNegN of time intervals respectively for negative UNeg from the signal length equal to the value of TL, the minimum values of the discrete processed signal UX are calculated and then from the values of such minima the lower envelope Elow of discrete processed signal UX is created.


Next the demodulated signal UDem is calculated by adding the values of the lower envelop Elow to the values of the upper envelop Eup






U
Dem
=E
up
E
low  (3)


Contrary to the discrete processed signal UX, the demodulated signal UDem does not contain the nominal frequency of the transmission line.


If the subsynchronous resonance phenomenon occurs, the discrete demodulation signal UDem contains a subharmonic resonance frequency which appears as the dominant one. Before the appearance of the subsynchronous resonance phenomenon, the demodulated signal UDem is smaller than the RMSLev value. At the moment when the subsynchronous resonance appears, the demodulated signal UDem exceeds the RMSLev value.


Step S4
Detection of the Presence of Subsynchronous Resonance Frequency in Demodulated Signal UDem

by comparing the root mean square RMS value of the demodulated signal UDem with the value of RMSLeV


First the root mean square RMS value of the demodulated signal UDem is performed. RMS value is the statistic magnitude of the discrete signal, the details of such calculation are well known to those skilled in the art.


Then the RMS value is compared to the RMSLev value which was delivered as a parameter in the first step.


If the RMS value of UDem is smaller than the RMSLev value, that means that there is no subsynchronous resonance frequency detected in demodulated signal UDem


In this case an amplitude of subsynchronous resonance frequency AFss and the respective frequency fFss are considered equal to zero.


If the RMS value of UDem signal is bigger than or equal to the RMSLev value, further analysis is performed in step S5.


Step S5

Calculation and Identification of Voltage Amplitude AFss and Frequency fFss, Related to Subsynchronous Resonance


First the calculation of FFT (Fast Fourier Transform) of UDem signal is performed. The FFT operation transforms the signal from the time domain into signal in the frequency domain; the details of such calculation are well known to those skilled in the art.


Then the highest value of a voltage amplitude AFss in a spectrum band between 10% and 90% of the nominal frequency of the transmission line is calculated and compared to the RMSLev value.


If the highest value of a voltage amplitude AFss is smaller then the value of RMSLev, that means that there is no subsynchronous resonance frequency detected (AFss=0, fFss=0).


If the highest value of a voltage amplitude AFss bigger than or equal to the value of RMSLev then the value of amplitude AFss and the respective frequency fFss are considered subsynchronous resonance.


Step 6

Visualization of Subsynchronous Resonance Amplitude as the Highest Value of a Voltage Amplitude AFss and/or the Respective Frequency fFss.


In this step the subsynchronous resonance amplitude is displayed as the highest value of a voltage amplitude AFss and/or the respective resonance frequency is also displayed, using well known means for displaying or printing data, connected to the computer device (8), which is not presented in the drawings.

Claims
  • 1. A method of subsynchronous resonance detection in power electrical systems with series capacitors in which voltage signals are measured on line and by finding zero crossing points of the discrete signal of the measured voltage, positive and negative half cycles of the wave form of the discrete signal of voltage are calculated in a computer device to which constant parameters are delivered by the user, comprising the following actions: creating a demodulated signal (UDem) of voltage by adding the minimum value of the negative half cycle of the wave form of discrete processed signal (UX) of voltage to the maximum value of the positive half cycle of the wave form of discrete processed signal (UX) for time intervals having a signal length (TL), where (TL) is a constant parameter, delivered by the user,calculating a root mean square value (RMS) for demodulated signal of voltage (UDem) and comparing it with the value of another constant parameter delivered by the user as the level of root mean square value (RMSLev) and when the value of (RMS) is smaller than the value of (RMSLev) it indicates that there is no subsynchronous resonance, and when the value of (RMS) is bigger than the value of (RMSLev), the presence of subsynchronous resonance is identified by the determination of voltage amplitude (AFss) of subsynchronous resonance and/or frequency (fFss) of subsynchronous resonance.
  • 2. A method according to claim 1, characterised in that during finding zero crossing points, two hystereses for positive and negative half cycles of the wave form are established for determination of sequences of consecutive time intervals (TPoz1, TNeg1, . . . TPozN, TNegN,) respectively for the positive (UPoz) and negative (UNeg) part of discrete processed signal (UX) between zero crossings points in order to create the upper envelope (Eup) and the lower envelope (Elow) of discrete processed signal (UX).
  • 3. A method according to claim 2, characterised in that an absolute value of hysteresis for positive and negative half cycles of the wave form is equal to the root mean square value level (RMSLev).
  • 4. A method according to claim 1, characterised in that the signal length (TL) has a time value in the time domain of minimum 0.2 s.
  • 5. A computer program for detection of subsynchronous resonance in electrical power systems with series capacitors, which computer program is loadable in and executable on a data processing unit of a computer device and which computer program when being executed by the data processing unit of the computer performs the method according to claim 1.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
10460004.4 Feb 2010 EP regional
PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind 371c Date
PCT/EP2011/000553 2/4/2011 WO 00 6/25/2012