Control room above 66 kV GIS Building
Control room above 66 kV GIS Building
(OP)
The space available is very tight with a new plot for a 220/66 kV substation.
to the best of my knowledge, I have never seen a control room above a 66 kV or more GIS room.
I don't think there is any electrical reason for that.
I doubt it is mostly due to structural loading of the roof with GIS rooms usually having a wide column-free span.
Any clues?
to the best of my knowledge, I have never seen a control room above a 66 kV or more GIS room.
I don't think there is any electrical reason for that.
I doubt it is mostly due to structural loading of the roof with GIS rooms usually having a wide column-free span.
Any clues?






RE: Control room above 66 kV GIS Building
I don't believe there to be a technical reason why you could not design a control room above a GIS switch-room. It would not be my first choice, but you can engineer your way out of a lot of not-my-first-choice situations, it always comes down to $$.
The building would need to be able to support the control room, as well as meet all applicable codes for; number of occupants, fire, egress, seismic, (other risks?), etc.
Good luck and let us know how it turns out.
Regards,
GG
"I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work." Thomas Alva Edison (1847-1931)
RE: Control room above 66 kV GIS Building
RE: Control room above 66 kV GIS Building
RE: Control room above 66 kV GIS Building
I wish to share the points on the grounding of the GIS substations .Hello Mr.cucky2000 can you throw some light on this?
RE: Control room above 66 kV GIS Building
1) External Yard Ground grid: Use deep rods if feasible and take advantage of ground foundations and concrete slabs as a supplementary ground electrode. Diagonal ground conductors (counterpoise) could also help to reduce hotspots.
2) Internal Building ground: Ground the floor steel rebar to form a quasi-equipotential surface. If there is concern with steel magnetic saturation, consider the use of copper ground loops 20'x20' (~6mx~6m) to avoid high frequency magnetization caused by very-fast transient wave notorious on GIS of single bus per phase typically on design 220 kV & above. (Less severe are for GIS with 3 phase in a single tube typ. On design up to 170 kV).
For grounding detail, see below couple sketches that we hope bring some light to your questions.
RE: Control room above 66 kV GIS Building
BTW, forgive me, but what do you guys mean by "hot spots"?
RE: Control room above 66 kV GIS Building
"Hot-spots" terminology is used by some engineers to associate unsafe dangerous zones on the substation represented by red areas in typical step and touch potentials grid plots similar to the one shown below.
This method can be visually identified and help quickly to refine grounding designs.
RE: Control room above 66 kV GIS Building
RE: Control room above 66 kV GIS Building
i.e. a typical touch voltage involved an extended arm (maximum 2 m ) within reach, so the 3D voltage mesh should be "touch voltage" not only "GRP absolute values".
This is true for outdoor substations.
Another subject here for GIS stations: some local standards ask for epoxy coated rebars to be embedded in GIS hall concrete slab, the coating galvanically isolates the rebars from concrete and electrical contiuity of rebars are not clear.
The coating has a breakdown voltage of around 5 kV.
The steel rebars are NOT part of earthing grid, and induced voltages may arise during VFTO, I personally think these rebars are electrically "useless" as it can't be considered equi-potential.
RE: Control room above 66 kV GIS Building
If there is no code constraints using conductive rebar, there is way to simplify the floor grounding design adding a dimly cooper loop to minimize the effect of the high frequency VFTO.
See the sketch above for a conceptual application.