Technical justification for the previous comments on VLF
VLF is rather new outside of Europe. The Europeans have been using this voltage source for 25yrs. The earliest developments were at the Technical University of Berlin High Voltage Institute.
Reference:
Research and Development, Annual Report 1992, TU Berlin High Voltage Institute
Prof. Dr.- Ing. Kalkner, Dipl. Ing. R. Bach
Kalkner and Bach show that VLF is exellent in growing electrical trees in XPLE insulation. 50Hz grows e-trees at 2mm per hour and .1Hz (VLF sin) grows e-trees at 12mm per hour(**). The VLF power source is excellent in quickly breaking down insulation. VLF is superior to DC because it can break down 'high impedance,' such as a knife cut. Since the source alternates polarity, space charge is not built up in a DC hipot. Aged cable will fail soon after application of DC hipot, e.g. >2Uo for >15 minutes. VLF voltage source is more expensive than a DC set but, far less than PD diagnostic system.
In short the VLF source is the best HIPOT available in the industry. However, in 25yrs of use the Europeans (especially the Germans who developed this voltage source) have yet to present a large scale study that shows that using VLF will improve the reliability, or predict future performance of a cable. IEEE 400 raises the following questions at the conclusion of the VLF section. (8.5)
1. At what voltage level can a defect be detected?
2. Is it possible to miss a defect which will fault when the cable is returned to service?
3. Does the test aggravate what was a negligible defect so that it will fault when the cable is returned to service?
These questions have never been adequately answered. Consider the following case study.
Background:
A utility performed a PD test on a 1000’ft long 25kV, 1000kcmil XLPE feeder cable. According to the PD test, the cable was condemned. The cable was condemned on the basis that there were too many defects to repair, and it would be more economical to replace the cable. The utility asked a manufacturer of a VLF source to perform a VLF hipot on the cable. If any of the condemned phases survived, the PD test would be repeated.
Test set up:
According to the manufacturer of a VLF source a 25kV class cable should be tested with 0.1Hz VLF at 3xUo for 30minutes. (3xUo =3x13.2Vrms=39.6kVrms). During this experiment the manufacturer explained that their equipment only produces a maximum of 23kVrms, but claims that only the peak voltage needs to reach ~40kV to have a good VLF test. The manufacturer claimed that if the cable fails under test that the cable is ‘bad’ otherwise it is ‘good’. They claim that only 3 to 4% of cables that test ‘good’ will fail within the next three years. The manufacturer advocates a repeat of the 30minute VLF Hipot after a failed cable is repaired to ensure reliability.
Test results:
Each phase was tested independently. A phase passed the test, B phase failed after 20 minutes and C phase failed after a prolonged dwell time of 37 minutes. A PD test was conducted on A phase to measure its condtion.
Observations
A phase was known to have 3 cable PD (defect) sites from the previous test. In the second test these three sites were made worse by the VLF hipot. In addition to these 3 sites 7 new sites showed up. In this case the VLF hipot made the cable much worse, without failing it. This cable would have been placed back in service in worse condition than before the VLF hipot. Another questionable point is that C phase failed after 37minutes. If the manufactures recommendation was followed and the hipot terminated at 30 minutes, this cable would have been put back in service with an imminent failure.
**Comments
The defect growth rate studies cannot be generalized to defects in cables. The experiment uses a needle pushed into cable insulation. This does not represent the electric stress distribution of can electrical tree that is in the presence of a water tree, the most common type of defect in aged extruded cable. This means that defects in cable do not grow at a uniform rate and the VLF hipot is destructive to aged cables. This has been demonstrated in a recent 3 year study including 151, 3-phase feeder cables.