mgtrp
Electrical
- May 4, 2008
- 326
Hi all,
I'm in the process of preparing settings for a transmission line protection relay, and as part of this am simulating faults in various locations using our load flow/fault calculation software (ETAP).
With reference to the simplified network diagram in the attachment, the operation of the line protection for a line-ground fault in the location shown is that T4 protection will see the fault, trip the T4 LV CB (no high-side CB), and operate a high-speed grounding switch on the transmission line to give a bolted line-ground fault. The protection relay that I'm setting then sees this bolted ground fault and trips its own local circuit breakers.
When I simulate a ground fault in the location shown with G4 in service (i.e., before the T4 protection relay has tripped the T4 LV CB), the ground fault current seen by my protection relay is relatively high - about 170A - compared with about 80A seen by T4's protection.
When I simulate the same fault with G4 out of service (i.e., after the T4 has tripped the T4 LV CB), two things happen:
1/ The overall ground fault current increases to 325A
2/ The ground fault current seen by my protection relay collapses, with virtually of it the ground fault current (302A) returning via T4, while only 23A returning via T1, T2 and T3.
This seems somewhat counter-intuitive to me - removal of a source resulting in increased ground fault current, and a massive shift in the way the currents flow. Therefore, I drew out a rough sequence network for each case, also shown in the attachment. In case 1 (G4 in service), I would expect a higher fault current due to there being more parallel paths for the fault current to flow, with the zero sequence current splitting in proportion to the combined [ZTX + ZT1/ZT2/ZT3] zero sequence impedance to the ZT4 zero sequence impedance. In case 2 (G4 out of service), I would expect a lower fault current, with the zero sequence split remaining the same.
Am I missing something, and about to have a learning moment, or is my software leading me down the wrong path? I've already checked the data entered for each system element (or at least as much seems relevant - my sketch is a simplified version of a small portion of a large network model), and there don't seem to be any data entry errors.
Thanks in advance!
I'm in the process of preparing settings for a transmission line protection relay, and as part of this am simulating faults in various locations using our load flow/fault calculation software (ETAP).
With reference to the simplified network diagram in the attachment, the operation of the line protection for a line-ground fault in the location shown is that T4 protection will see the fault, trip the T4 LV CB (no high-side CB), and operate a high-speed grounding switch on the transmission line to give a bolted line-ground fault. The protection relay that I'm setting then sees this bolted ground fault and trips its own local circuit breakers.
When I simulate a ground fault in the location shown with G4 in service (i.e., before the T4 protection relay has tripped the T4 LV CB), the ground fault current seen by my protection relay is relatively high - about 170A - compared with about 80A seen by T4's protection.
When I simulate the same fault with G4 out of service (i.e., after the T4 has tripped the T4 LV CB), two things happen:
1/ The overall ground fault current increases to 325A
2/ The ground fault current seen by my protection relay collapses, with virtually of it the ground fault current (302A) returning via T4, while only 23A returning via T1, T2 and T3.
This seems somewhat counter-intuitive to me - removal of a source resulting in increased ground fault current, and a massive shift in the way the currents flow. Therefore, I drew out a rough sequence network for each case, also shown in the attachment. In case 1 (G4 in service), I would expect a higher fault current due to there being more parallel paths for the fault current to flow, with the zero sequence current splitting in proportion to the combined [ZTX + ZT1/ZT2/ZT3] zero sequence impedance to the ZT4 zero sequence impedance. In case 2 (G4 out of service), I would expect a lower fault current, with the zero sequence split remaining the same.
Am I missing something, and about to have a learning moment, or is my software leading me down the wrong path? I've already checked the data entered for each system element (or at least as much seems relevant - my sketch is a simplified version of a small portion of a large network model), and there don't seem to be any data entry errors.
Thanks in advance!