This application is a 371 application of the international PCT application serial no. PCT/CN2016/089942, filed on Jul. 13, 2016, which claims the priority benefit of China application no. 201510452042.3, filed on Jul. 28, 2015. The entirety of each of the above-mentioned patent applications is hereby incorporated by reference herein and made a part of this specification.
The present invention belongs to the field of DC transmission converter valves, and in particular, to a thyristor assembly radiator for a DC converter valve.
DC converter valves are core devices for DC transmission. A converter valve usually includes a plurality of components. The components of the converter valve include a thyristor assembly, an anode reactor, etc. The thyristor assembly further includes a thyristor, a radiator, a damping resistor, a damping capacitor, and an associated cooling system. The converter valve has a complex structure and includes many parts. The converter valve may suffer from failures due to various reasons during operation, and needs to be repaired in time if failure occurs, so as to resume its normal operation. Therefore, the convenience of device maintenance needs to be considered at various stages in the design process of the converter valve.
Currently, there are primarily two forms of damping resistors for a thyristor assembly. In the first form, the damping resistor is a water resistor, and the damping resistor is in direct contact with cooling water, dissipates heat independently, and has nothing to do with the thyristor radiator and cooling water pipeline thereof. When the cooling system operates normally, the damping resistor can dissipate heat well. However, if the damping resistor is faulty and needs maintenance, the cooling water inside the converter valve has to be discharged completely before the maintenance can be done. As a result, the maintenance is difficult and time consuming. In the second form, the damping resistor is a rod resistor. A plurality of rod resistors are disposed inside through holes provided beforehand in the thyristor radiator, and the damping resistors dissipate heat indirectly via the thyristor radiator, reducing the number of joints inside the converter valve assembly. However, some rod resistors may interfere with the cooling water pipeline of the thyristor radiator. As a result, when a rod resistor interfering with the cooling water pipeline is to be maintained, cooling water in the converter valve still needs to be discharged completely before the cooling water pipeline can be disassembled, leading to difficult maintenance.
An objective of the present invention is to provide a thyristor assembly radiator for a DC converter valve.
To achieve the foregoing objective, the present invention provides a solution as follows: A thyristor assembly radiator for a DC converter valve includes radiators, a thyristor being disposed between every two adjacent radiators, where each of the radiator includes a housing, a water feeding port is provided at an upper part of the housing, a water discharging port is provided at a lower part thereof, and through holes in the housing of the radiator for accommodating damping resistors are provided between the water feeding port and the water discharging port; a water discharging port of an Nth radiator is communicated with a water discharging port of an (N−2)th radiator via a pipeline, and a water feeding port of the Nth radiator is communicated with a water feeding port of an (N+2)th radiator via a pipeline, or a water feeding port of an Nth radiator is communicated with a water feeding port of the (N−2)th port via a pipeline, and the water discharging port of the Nth radiator is communicated with a water discharging port of the (N+2)th radiator via a pipeline, where N≥3, and N is an odd number; a water discharging port of an Mth radiator is communicated with a water discharging port of an (M−2)th radiator via a pipeline, and a water feeding port of the Mth radiator is communicated with a water feeding port of an (M+2)th radiator via a pipeline, or the water feeding port of the Mth radiator is communicated with a water feeding port of the (M−2)th radiator via a pipeline, and the water discharging port of the Mth radiator is communicated with a water discharging port of the (M+2)th radiator via a pipeline, where M≥4, and M is an even number; and water feeding ports of the last two radiators are communicated with each other via a pipeline.
In an improved technical solution of the present invention, the Nth radiator is communicated with the (N−2)th radiator via a (N−2)th type A bent pipeline, and the Nth radiator is also communicated with the (N+2)th radiator via a Nth type A bent pipeline.
In an improved technical solution of the present invention, the type A bent pipelines include a longitudinal pipe and two transverse pipes parallel to each other, one end of each of the transverse pipes is communicated with a radiator, and the other end thereof is communicated with the longitudinal pipe.
In an improved technical solution of the present invention, the Mth radiator is communicated with the (M−2)th radiator via a (M−2)th type B bent pipeline, the Mth radiator is also communicated with the (M+2)th radiator via a Mth type B bent pipeline, and the type B bent pipelines include a longitudinal pipe and elbows that are communicated with the longitudinal pipe and located at two ends of the longitudinal pipe.
In an improved technical solution of the present invention, each of the elbows includes a first transverse pipe, an inclined pipe, and a second transverse pipe; the first transverse pipe, the inclined pipe, and the second transverse pipe are communicated with each other successively, and the first transverse pipe is parallel to the second transverse pipe.
By means of the foregoing solution, the present invention has the following beneficial effects:
1. A damping resistor is disposed inside a thyristor radiator, so that the number of joints of a cooling system is reduced, the risk of leakage is lowered, and the operation reliability of a converter valve is improved.
2. The damping resistor disposed inside the thyristor radiator does not interfere with a water pipe of the radiator, so that the water pipe does not need to be disassembled when the damping resistor is maintained, thereby reducing the maintenance difficulty of a thyristor assembly, and reducing the maintenance time.
The following further describes in detail the technical solutions of the present invention with reference to the accompanying drawings and specific embodiments.
With reference to
In a preferable solution, radiators numbered with odd numbers are communicated with each other via a type A bent pipeline 11, the type A bent pipeline 11 includes a longitudinal pipe 15 and two transverse pipes 14 parallel to each other, one end of each of the transverse pipes 14 is communicated with a radiator, and the other end thereof is communicated with the longitudinal pipe 15.
Radiators numbered with even numbers are communicated with each other via type B bent pipeline 12, and the type B bent pipeline 12 includes a longitudinal pipe 19 and elbows that are communicated with the longitudinal pipe 19 and located at two ends of the longitudinal pipe 19. Each of the elbows includes a first transverse pipe 16, an inclined pipe 17, and a second transverse pipe 18, the first transverse pipe 16, the inclined pipe 17, and the second transverse pipe 18 are communicated with each other successively, and the first transverse pipe 16 is parallel to the second transverse pipe 18.
A length of a transverse part 14 of the type A bent pipeline 11 is a sum of lengths of the first transverse pipe 16, the second transverse pipe 18, and the inclined pipe 17 of the type B bent pipeline 12.
The foregoing embodiment is merely used to describe a technical idea of the present invention, rather than limiting the protection scope of the present invention. Any change made based on the technical solution according to the technical idea of the present invention shall fall within the protection scope of the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2015 1 0452042 | Jul 2015 | CN | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/CN2016/089942 | 7/13/2016 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2017/016390 | 2/2/2017 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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8385068 | Jacobson | Feb 2013 | B2 |
20120087092 | Huber | Apr 2012 | A1 |
20140198453 | Zhang | Jul 2014 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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103579144 | Feb 2014 | CN |
203909232 | Oct 2014 | CN |
104201161 | Dec 2014 | CN |
105070697 | Nov 2015 | CN |
2013026434 | Feb 2013 | JP |
2013026434 | Feb 2013 | JP |
Entry |
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“International Search Report (Form PCT/ISA/210)”, dated Oct. 25, 2016, with English translation thereof, pp. 1-4. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20180218965 A1 | Aug 2018 | US |