An electrical power delivery system is a complex system consisting of one or more generators with power flowing through cables to nodes, and then to loads. The functions required of the high-powered nodes are distribution, switching and power management. The functions of conversion and power conditioning are most appropriately handled at the branch level nodes. The node level functions are performed at high-power nodes in prior art legacy systems by circuit breakers and switch gear.
In the event of a fault, a prior art system may permit a high fault current, which has a potential for catastrophic collateral damage and which may also deprive other loads on the same or upwardly connected nodes of energy. When a fault occurs in the prior art system, a circuit breaker upstream from the fault opens. The prior art electromechanical circuit breaker may take up to 50 milliseconds to open for a high fault and 100 or more milliseconds for an intermediate fault. During these transient time periods, the systems upstream of the fault are perturbed. This perturbation is usually exhibited by a significant drop in voltage, particularly in close proximity to the fault, which may result in the voltage dropping to near zero for the period of time between the occurrence of the fault and the opening of the circuit breaker. This means that all loads being supplied by other circuits emanating from a node with a fault will experience a very low or zero voltage condition during the time of the fault. Sensitive loads may malfunction and some loads may become disconnected or may need to be reset or rebooted, causing them to be offline for a period of time significantly longer than the actual fault. This is obviously undesirable for sensitive and critical loads. Other loads may be transferred to alternate sources, which may cause further disturbances to the electrical system. In addition, there may be substantial arcing at the point of fault while the electromechanical circuit breaker is opening.
Such a scenario is shown in
Therefore, it is desirable to find a replacement for the electromechanical circuit breakers that currently detect and switch off faulted circuits. In particular, it is desirable that the replacement for the electromechanical circuit breaker be able to detect a high fault within about 50 microseconds and be able to interrupt a high fault current in less than 400 microseconds. This represents an approximate thousand-fold increase in speed over prior art legacy systems. It is also desirable that the arcing that traditionally occurs when an electromechanical circuit breaker is opened be minimized or eliminated.
The power node switching center (PNSC) of the present invention replaces existing upstream circuit breakers with ultra-fast circuit interrupters capable of detecting faults within 50 microseconds and interrupting faults within 400 microseconds.
The power node switching center is a device which has two parallel current paths for each line (or phase). One path consists of power electronic devices which can be gated to switch current on and off very quickly. The second, parallel path consists of a mechanical contactor device which carries current very efficiently and which can open sufficiently quickly to commutate the current to the power electronic path in less than 25 microseconds. This, combined with a low inductance path between the mechanical contacts and the power electronics, eliminates arcing when the mechanical contact is opened. The current then flows through the power electronics path until the power electronics are switched off.
The criteria regarding the time to interrupt the current is dependent upon two conditions. First, that the interruption time is so short that the loss of voltage during the fault will not jeopardize the operation of loads on adjacent circuits and, second, that the magnitude of the fault current will not jeopardize the integrity of the power electronics. This enhances the survivability of loads being fed by adjacent circuits and effectuates a tremendous reduction in collateral damage caused by a fault.
The electromechanical switch consists of a very low resistance contact structure that can open in less then 25 microseconds which consists of coaxial stationary poles, each having multiple contacts, and a lightweight conductive disk that makes electrical contact between the poles of the switch. Upon fault detection, a rapidly acting magnetic system launches the disk away from the poles, thereby opening the circuit. This magnetic system consists essentially of a capacitor, a fast switch and a magnetic pancake coil. The disk has low mass to allow a high acceleration and rapid contact separation.
A low inductance, laminated bus structure between the contactor and the solid state power electronics enables non-arcing commutation of the current from the contactor to the solid state power electronics within 25 microseconds.
This concept eliminates the losses that would be experienced with prior art, electromechanical circuit breakers. The system therefore has an efficiency equal to or better than the electromechanical circuit breaker.
One innovative aspect of the invention is the fault detection circuitry, which is able to detect fault conditions within about 30 microseconds. This is accomplished with a narrow bandwidth, high gain integrator operating on the output of a Rogowski coil current detector.
Another innovative aspect of the invention is in the opening mechanism of the mechanical contactor, which relies on a traditional Thompson drive, combined with very low inductance achieved via the integration of the low mass mechanical contactor and the power electronics switch. The low mass allows the movement of the mechanical contactor at a very high speed and commutation of the current to the power electronics. The current is thus interrupted before it reaches high values, which eliminates the magnetic stress on upstream circuits between the generator and the point of fault. In addition, the voltage on the upstream node is lost for such a short period of time that all loads being fed from the node having the fault or upstream of the node having the fault survive the event and continue to operate normally, and may not even be aware of the occurrence of the fault event.
The power node switching center is a device which will distribute, switch and control power at electrical power nodes whose power handling capacity ranges from 0.5 MW to 50 MW, while accurately detecting downstream system faults and stopping the current flow in less then 400 microseconds.
The operation of the switching module of the power node switching center PNSC consists of three main functions. These are: (1) detection of a fault current; (2) commutation of the current from a path traversing a mechanical contactor to a path through a power electronics switch; and (3) interruption of the fault current by opening the power electronics switch.
The basic topology of the PNSC switching module is shown in
The preferred embodiment of the PNSC switching module consists essentially of two parallel current carrying paths 100 and 200 for each phase. Path 100 includes mechanical contactor 102, and is the primary current carrying path during normal (non-fault) operations. When a fault is detected, discharge circuit 300 is gated, causing mechanical contactor 102 to open by dumping the charge stored in capacitor 302 through pancake coil 406, thereby inducing a repulsive magnetic force between pancake coil 406 and disk 408 (See
The connection between mechanical path 100 and power electronic path 200 consists primarily of a laminated bus, which provides a low-inductance connection between paths 100 and 200. This allows for fast commutation of the current from path 100 to path 200. Because of the speed of the commutation, the voltage between the line end and the load end of path 100 does not have time to rise to a level which would result in the ionization of the air in the gap between disk 407 and contacts 402 and 404. This will reduce or eliminate arcing when mechanical contactor 102 is opened.
One novel aspect of the invention is the ability to detect a fault current within a few microseconds of the onset of the fault condition. During a fault condition, the current will rise rapidly. To detect a fault, the detection circuitry looks for an approximate 100 A change in current within a few microseconds. The detector, however, must not confuse a fault current with the normal operating current, which may consist of thousands of amps, normally at 60 Hz. Therefore, the detector must have a narrow bandwidth to detect the fault current, which typically has a high frequency content. The bandwidth for the detector will therefore typically be in the 10 kHz-100 kHz range, allowing the detection of the rise in current within a time range of 1-100 microseconds (1/F), depending upon the magnitude of the fault current.
The current detector of the present invention is shown diagrammatically in
The output of the Rogowski coil is also integrated by a low gain, wide bandwidth integrator 306 for line frequency current sensing purposes. The response of this sensor is shown in the bottom half of
Prior to the detection of the fault, the primary path for current was path 100, through mechanical contactor 102. Once the fault has been detected, mechanical contactor 102 is opened and the current is then commutated to and conducted through path 200 until power electronics 102 can be shut down, thereby stopping the flow of all current.
Mechanical contactor 102 is a novel improvement to prior art contactors based on a Thompson Drive.
Contactor 102 is shown in cross-sectional view in
The novel aspects of the contactor mechanism 102 include the concentric configuration of stationary contacts 402 and 404 and pancake coil 406, and the low mass of moveable disk 408 which allows the disk to be driven away from contacts 402 and 404 in a very short period of time. Prior art mechanical contactors utilizing a Thompson drive typically have the contactor disk attached to a piston, such that the pancake coil must drive the mass of both the piston and the disk. In the contactor of the present invention, disk 408 slides along rod 410. As such pancake coil 406 is only required to drive the mass of disk 408 when it is energized.
During the period between about 80 microseconds and 195 microseconds, power electronics 202 are conducting the fault current. At a little after the 195 microsecond mark, the power electronics are switched off and the current is interrupted. Thus, the entire process from start of the fault to interruption of the current has taken less than 200 microseconds.
While the general concepts of the power node switching center have been outlined herein, the specific implementation details are meant to be exemplary only and not part of the invention. It should be readily realizable to one of ordinary skill in the art that many different implementations are possible and still remain within in the spirit of the invention. This entire scope of the invention is defined by the claims which follow.