vandal06
Electrical
- Jan 17, 2011
- 68
Hi all,
I'm aware that transformer inrush is a phenomenon caused by energizing the transformer at a non-zero crossing of the voltage waveform that causes the remanent flux to interact with the energizing flux such that you get large increases in magnetizing current, often leading to terminal currents around 12xFLA. Is this limited at all by the short circuit availability of the source energizing the transformer? I thought perhaps the saturation of the transformer core reduced the impedance of the transformer so much that it was primarily winding resistance that limited the current flow. I also know that there are all sorts of off-nominal harmonic currents such as 2nd and 5th involved that I have not been able to reconcile with this possible interpretation.
My specific scenario is I'm doing a protection study on a system that involves a 115/34.5 kV two-winding, delta/grounded-wye transformer protected by a numerical differential relay. A instantaneous overcurrent element has been set in the high-voltage winding protection to back up the differential for winding faults. Typical setting philosophy is to set it above 12xFLA (restrain in inrush) or 1.25% of the secondary bus fault current, whichever is higher. This ensure that 1) the relay does not operate on inrush and 2) only operates for transformer faults. This relay has been set according to that principle, but when running my short circuit studies it is apparent that the system cannot supply enough short circuit current for the element to ever operate when trying to set above 12xFLA.
My first thought was to reduce the pickup to operate for transformer faults (while avoiding secondary faults) and time delay it 0.1 to 0.2 seconds to ride through the inrush. However, if the inrush current is dependent on the short circuit availability of the system this is a moot point. I have been perusing the forum topics for the last hour and have not seen this explicitly addressed amongst the other transformer inrush topics, so here we go.
I'm aware that transformer inrush is a phenomenon caused by energizing the transformer at a non-zero crossing of the voltage waveform that causes the remanent flux to interact with the energizing flux such that you get large increases in magnetizing current, often leading to terminal currents around 12xFLA. Is this limited at all by the short circuit availability of the source energizing the transformer? I thought perhaps the saturation of the transformer core reduced the impedance of the transformer so much that it was primarily winding resistance that limited the current flow. I also know that there are all sorts of off-nominal harmonic currents such as 2nd and 5th involved that I have not been able to reconcile with this possible interpretation.
My specific scenario is I'm doing a protection study on a system that involves a 115/34.5 kV two-winding, delta/grounded-wye transformer protected by a numerical differential relay. A instantaneous overcurrent element has been set in the high-voltage winding protection to back up the differential for winding faults. Typical setting philosophy is to set it above 12xFLA (restrain in inrush) or 1.25% of the secondary bus fault current, whichever is higher. This ensure that 1) the relay does not operate on inrush and 2) only operates for transformer faults. This relay has been set according to that principle, but when running my short circuit studies it is apparent that the system cannot supply enough short circuit current for the element to ever operate when trying to set above 12xFLA.
My first thought was to reduce the pickup to operate for transformer faults (while avoiding secondary faults) and time delay it 0.1 to 0.2 seconds to ride through the inrush. However, if the inrush current is dependent on the short circuit availability of the system this is a moot point. I have been perusing the forum topics for the last hour and have not seen this explicitly addressed amongst the other transformer inrush topics, so here we go.