siberhusky
Electrical
- Jan 7, 2003
- 29
Hi...
We initially specified a 69/13.8 kV transformer with an impedance of .1942 p.u. (56 MVA, 69 kV).
Then it was decided to specify the transformer with a high-side voltage of 67.275 kV instead.
The goal was to come up with an equivalent impedance at the new highside voltage... so that we would obtain the same fault level on the 13.8kV bus as we had at the originally specified nominal voltage (69 kV).
Performing an impedance conversion using the following formula...
Znewbase = Zoldbase x [(Old kV)^2/(New kV)^2]
... we obtained a new impedance value of .2043 p.u. (56 MVA, 67.275 kV)
However, comparative fault levels obtained when modeling these transformers clearly indicates that these are not equivalent transformers. (The situation worsens as the difference between the two specified voltages increases.)
My understanding is that this method is not accurate, despite the per-unit conversion, because it does not take into consideration the change in the transformer winding ratio when one changes from a nominal voltage of 69 kV to a nominal voltage of 67.275 kV. I'm not sure I get this, because what use is the per-unit system if you can't obtain equivalent impedances at different voltages?
How does one go about correctly determining the proper revised impedance?
We initially specified a 69/13.8 kV transformer with an impedance of .1942 p.u. (56 MVA, 69 kV).
Then it was decided to specify the transformer with a high-side voltage of 67.275 kV instead.
The goal was to come up with an equivalent impedance at the new highside voltage... so that we would obtain the same fault level on the 13.8kV bus as we had at the originally specified nominal voltage (69 kV).
Performing an impedance conversion using the following formula...
Znewbase = Zoldbase x [(Old kV)^2/(New kV)^2]
... we obtained a new impedance value of .2043 p.u. (56 MVA, 67.275 kV)
However, comparative fault levels obtained when modeling these transformers clearly indicates that these are not equivalent transformers. (The situation worsens as the difference between the two specified voltages increases.)
My understanding is that this method is not accurate, despite the per-unit conversion, because it does not take into consideration the change in the transformer winding ratio when one changes from a nominal voltage of 69 kV to a nominal voltage of 67.275 kV. I'm not sure I get this, because what use is the per-unit system if you can't obtain equivalent impedances at different voltages?
How does one go about correctly determining the proper revised impedance?