I can guess a purpose for the shunt reactor.
I assume they plan to measure partial discharge by installing coupling capacitors on the input to the transformer. If it’s like Iris does for motors, it’s actually an R-C circuit with C acting like isolation for power frequency voltage, but acts like a shot circuit for very high frequency voltage spikes... allows that voltage spike to be seen and measured accross the resistor (in the range of a few hundred millivolts).
Somewhere deep inside the machine, a series insulation capacitance bridged over causing that voltage spike to appear at the termianls. It is clearly filtered by the inductance of the machine itself.
BUT, if we have a perfectly stiff powersupply (ideal voltage source with no series impedance), then there can not under any circumstances be a deviation from sinusoidal voltage at the terminals of that ideal voltage source.
So, maybe the shunt reactor provides a series impedance to enhance the voltage drop created by partial discharg so they can more easily be measured. Although we use no such shunt reactor for our motor partial discharge measurements.
Alternatively, if you are using an electronic power supply which has harmonics and spikes built in, you may want to isolate the transfomer measurement from that external source of voltage transients which may be mistaken for partial discharge.
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