Characterization of Metallic-Particle Dynamics in Compressed SF - Insulated Systems Under Different Voltage Stresses
Characterization of Metallic-Particle Dynamics in Compressed SF - Insulated Systems Under Different Voltage Stresses
Characterization of Metallic-Particle Dynamics in Compressed SF - Insulated Systems Under Different Voltage Stresses
|
|
.
|
\
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=
r
l
E l
q
o
(2)
where
o
is the permittivity of free space. For uncoated
enclosure, the particle charge depends on the instantaneous
electric field at the instant of impact. For coated enclosure, on
the other hand, it is assumed that the free charge on a particle
resting on a dielectric coating is due to a partial discharge,
then it is possible to estimate the field necessary for lifting off
E
l
[5]. The particle charge according to the discharge
mechanism is given by [3]
>
<
0 < E q = q
0 > E +q = q E
+q = q E
E
o
o l
o l
(3)
where q
o
is the particle lifting off charge for coated enclosure.
The variation of both the lifting charge and field of the wire
particle with the coating thickness at different gas pressures is
taken from [5]. The absolute pressure P is taken as 300 kPa
except where it is specified. The drag force F
d
is taken into
consideration according to [9]. For fully erected long
cylindrical wire particle with hemispherical termination, F
d
is
basically considered to be viscous, and pressure drag is minor
except at relatively high density gas. Also, the variation of
pure SF
6
density at 20C with the pressure range from 100 to
500 kPa is taken from [9].
III. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
A. AC Voltage
In case of ac voltage application, the frequency is taken as
60 Hz. The return of experience shows that the majority of
dielectric failures in GIS ( 61 %) occur under normal
operating ac voltage [10]. Therefore, it is of significant
importance to investigate the factors governs the dynamics of
metallic particles under ac voltage. The significant reduction
of the maximum height x , compared with uncoated case, is
due to the occurrence of pseudo-resonance (having fixed
frequency f
r
) of the particle motion as can be seen in Fig. 1.
This phenomenon occurs because of capturing the particle
very close to the enclosure, leading to pseudo-resonance
condition [3]. In Fig. 1(a) for uncoated enclosure, it is seen
12.0 12.5 13.0 13.5
Time, s
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
P
a
r
t
i
c
l
e
p
o
s
i
t
i
o
n
,
m
m
Uncoated, RC = 0.80, V = 50 kV (rms)
0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5
Time, s
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
1.2
1.4
P
a
r
t
i
c
l
e
p
o
s
i
t
i
o
n
,
m
m
Coated (5 um), RC = 0.80, V = 50 kV (rms)
Fig. 1 Section of the simulated window of particle motion at U
ac
= 50 kV
(rms) and Rc = 0.8; (a) Uncoated and (b) coated (5 m).
that whenever the particle hits the enclosure, it rebounds and
reaches a new larger height with random movement if the
rebound velocity is substantial. After ~ 12.8s, every time the
particle hits the enclosure, the rebound velocity decreases
sharply. Therefore, the particle does not reach greater heights
and gets captured very close to the enclosure. This
phenomenon is clearly seen in Fig. 1(b) for coated enclosure
because of decreasing the lifting charge and increasing the
lifting field [5]. Hence, the pseudo-resonance occurs when the
particle velocity during hitting is synchronized with the point-
on-wave of the applied ac voltage [3].
Fig. 2 shows that the frequency of the pseudo-resonance
decreases with the increase in R
c
. In other words, the pseudo-
resonance is associated with a lower value of R
c
, which
reduces the rebound speed and hence increases the frequency
of the pseudo-resonance. This phenomenon is inhibited for
higher values of R
c
[3]. During the particle flight with
constant charge, its time-varying velocity is decreasing under
40 50 60 70
Applied voltage, kV (rms)
0
10
20
30
R
e
s
o
n
a
n
c
e
f
r
e
q
u
e
n
c
y
,
H
z
Ucoated
RC = 0.80
RC = 0.85
RC = 0.90
RC = 0.95
Fig. 2 Influence of the Rc on resonance frequency for uncoated enclosure.
the action of the gravitational force F
g
, with a frequency
equals to that of the applied ac voltage. The particle
movement is random until the occurrence of the pseudo-
resonance phenomenon. Under such resonance conditions,
particle impact with the enclosure occurs when F
e
is
maximum, i.e. at positive and negative peaks of E(t) to fulfill
(3), where F
e
assists F
g
. Therefore, the ratio f/f
r
is usually
equal to an integer number plus half. At increasing the
applied ac voltage, the particle acquires greater momentum at
the beginning of the resonance period leading to higher F
e
/F
g
.
The disappearance of such resonance phenomenon at some
voltage ranges is due to the unfulfillment of the
aforementioned condition of f/f
r
.
Fig. 3 illustrates the effect of ac voltage on x with and
without coating. It is clearly seen that coating drastically
reduces x . Under coating conditions, meanwhile, x does not
necessarily increase with the applied voltage; sometimes it
decreases. This is due to x depends on the point-on-wave of
the applied voltage at which the particle hits the enclosure.
40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Applied voltage, kV (rms)
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
M
a
x
i
m
u
m
h
e
i
g
h
t
,
m
m
Uncoated
Coated
Lifting off
Coated, RC = 0.80
5 um
10 um
30 um
50 um
Fig. 3 Effect of enclosure coating on maximum height at R
c
= 0.8.
Therefore, the use of dielectric coatings is a means of
immobilizing the metallic particles [7]. In addition, in case of
coating the restitution coefficient R
c
becomes much lower
than that for uncoated enclosure [3]. Other results show that
the increase in pressure drastically reduces the maximum
height x due to the significant reduction in the lifting charge,
and the increase in both the lifting field and F
d
[5]. In
addition, increasing the gas pressure leads to the occurrence
of pseudo-resonance at higher voltage. This is also attributed
to the decrease in lifting charge and the increase in lifting
field when increasing the gas pressure [5].
For coated enclosure, the voltage at resonance initiation
increases with coating thickness, but decreases with R
c
as
illustrated in Fig. 4. The former trend can be explained in
terms of the decrease in lifting charge and the increase in
lifting field [5]. The latter trend is attributed to the lower
momentum associated with the particle after impact at lower
R
c
.
5 10 15 20 25 30
Coating thickness, um
40
60
80
100
120
V
o
l
t
a
g
e
a
t
r
e
s
o
n
a
n
c
e
i
n
i
t
i
a
t
i
o
n
,
k
V
(
r
m
s
)
Coated
RC = 0.75
RC = 0.80
RC = 0.85
Fig. 4 Influence of coating thickness on voltage at resonance initiation.
40 50 60 70
Applied voltage, kV (rms)
10
20
30
40
50
60
M
a
x
i
m
u
m
h
e
i
g
h
t
,
m
m
Uncoated
RC = 0.80
RC = 0.85
RC = 0.90
RC = 0.95
Fig. 5 Dependence of maximum height on ac voltage for uncoated enclosure.
R
c
=0.80
R
c
=0.85
R
c
=0.90
R
c
=0.95
Uncoated
R
c
=0.80
5 m
10m
30m
50m
R
c
= 0.75
R
c
= 0.80
R
c
= 0.85
R
c
=0.80
R
c
=0.85
R
c
=0.90
R
c
=0.95
Fig. 5 shows that x increases with the increase in the
applied voltage and/or R
c
. The latter effect is due to the
increase in the particle velocity after impact when increasing
R
c
. Also, higher R
c
leads to the particle to cross the gap at
lower applied voltages. Other results indicate that the crossing
time significantly decreases at higher voltages and nearly
becomes independent of R
c
. The probability of breakdown for
such elongated particles is higher when the particle is located
close (2mm) but not in contact with the inner conductor [7].
For uncoated enclosure and at a constant applied ac voltage,
the peak value of the number of impacts decreases with the
increase in R
c
as can be seen in Fig. 6(a). Moreover, for a
constant R
c
, the peak value of the number of impacts
decreases with the increase in the applied voltage as
illustrated in Fig. 6(b). The trend of the results in Fig. 6 is
attributed to the fact that higher R
c
and/or applied ac voltage
leads to higher x , as given by Fig. 5, where a greater part of
the momentum is maintained throughout the impact leading to
the increase in both x and the time between two consecutive
impacts. At pseudo-resonance condition, Fig. 6(c) shows a
remarkable increase in the number of impacts.
B. DC/Single SI
The simulation results for uncoated conductors, and under
dc prestress voltage U
dc
and superimposed single switching
impulse U
imp
(dc/single SI) are shown in Figs. 7 and 8. Also,
it must be noted that all the computations are carried out for a
constant total peak voltage
l imp dc
20
U U U = + , where U
l
is
the particle lifting off voltage, i.e. at 543 kV 4.8 pu, and
during a time duration of greater than 28 the tail time of the
slowest SI. During this duration it is sure that the SI wave has
completely died out.
Fig. 7 shows that the distance traveled by the particle
"height" is larger in the case of dc prestress/SI than that in the
case of applying SI only. In other words, the dc/SI is more
dangerous (risk of failure) than a pure impulse only because
the particle can cross the gap in a shorter time for the dc/SI
case. It is clearly seen that for a constant front time of 250 s,
the longer the tail time the higher is the height. This is due to
the fact that most of the particle momentum develops under
the decaying part of SI tail time.
Fig. 8 plots the crossing time vs. the percentage dc prestress
voltage ))
/( (
imp dc dc
U U U + for different SI of a constant
front time of 250 s and various tail times. It is seen that as
the percentage dc prestress voltage increases, the crossing
time decreases. This is attributed to the fact that when U
dc
increases, the particle takes a minimum time to lift off and its
velocity significantly increases. Consequently, the particle
crosses the gap faster, and this effect augments with SI having
longer tail time.
0 40 80 120
Time between two consecutive impacts, ms
0
100
200
300
400
500
N
u
m
b
e
r
o
f
i
m
p
a
c
t
s
Uncoated, U=40 kV(rms)
RC = 0.80
RC = 0.90
RC = 0.95
0 40 80 120 160 200
Time between two consecutive impacts, ms
0
100
200
300
400
N
u
m
b
e
r
o
f
i
m
p
a
c
t
s
Uncoated, RC = 0.85
U = 45 kV (rms)
U = 50 kV (rms)
U = 55 kV (rms)
0 40 80 120 160 200
Time between two consecutive impacts, ms
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
1,400
N
u
m
b
e
r
o
f
i
m
p
a
c
t
s
a
t
r
e
s
o
n
a
n
c
e
Uncoated, U=48 kV (rms)
RC = 0.80
RC = 0.90
RC = 0.95
Fig. 6 Distributions of the time between two consecutive impacts; (a) Uac =
40 kV(rms), (b) Rc = 0.85 and (c) Uac = 48 kV(rms) resonance condition.
C. DC/Successive Impulses
Re-strikes of circuit breakers during the switching of
capacitor banks, or unloaded transmission lines, can lead to
voltage escalation on the line side of the circuit breaker. This
is resulting in high values of trapped and line-side voltage;
R
c
=0.85
U
ac
Uac
Uac
U
ac
=48 kV(rms)
R
c
=0.80
R
c
=0.90
R
c
=0.95
R
c
=0.80
R
c
=0.90
R
c
=0.95
Uac=40 kV(rms)
(a)
(b)
(c)
0 20 40 60 80 100
Time, ms
0
20
40
60
H
e
i
g
h
t
,
m
m
250/1500 us, Udc = 0
250/2500 us, Udc = 0
250/3500 us, Udc = 0
250/1500 us, Udc = Ul
250/2500 us, Udc = Ul
250/3500 us, Udc = Ul
Fig. 7 Dependence of particle trajectory on SI tail time with (solid curves)
and without (dashed curves) dc prestress for uncoated enclosure.
0 1 2 3 4 5
Udc/(Udc+Uimp), %
40
80
120
160
C
r
o
s
s
i
n
g
t
i
m
e
,
m
s
250/1500 us
250/2500 us
250/3500 us
Fig. 8 Crossing time vs. percentage dc prestress for various SI tail times for
uncoated enclosure.
especially some types of oil CB which cause overvoltages to
ground of up to 8 pu [11]. Three similar (250/1500 s)
successive impulses having a time interval of 13 ms and a
constant total peak voltage for each impulse
l imp dc
20
) (
imp dc
ft t U U t U + = (4)
where is the attenuation constant. It can be noticed that
when increasing f, the particle crosses the gap in a shorter
time. Increasing f leads to successive enhancing of the particle
momentum. Further increase in f shows little decrease in the
crossing time. This is attributed to the shorter time between
the positive and negative impulses. Therefore, the net force
exerted on the particle in one cycle unchanged remarkably
with further increase in f. Also, the time taken by the particle
for lifting off increases with the decrease in f. Other results
reveal that for a constant f, increasing leads to longer
crossing time. This is because of decreasing the momentum
acquired by the particle due to the quicker decay of the
oscillatory impulses.
IV. CONCLUSIONS
Under 60-Hz ac energization, the results reveal that for
uncoated conductors, the increase in R
c
leads to the decrease
in the frequency of the pseudo resonance. For further increase
such resonance phenomenon is inhibited. The crossing time is
s, U
dc
s, Udc
s, Udc
s, Udc
s, Udc
s, Udc
U
l
Ul
U
l
Udc/Ul = 0.5 pu
U
dc
/U
l
= 1.0 pu
Udc/Ul = 1.5 pu
U
dc
/U
l
= 2.0 pu
s
s
s
U
dc
/(U
dc
+
imp
), %
0 20 40 60 80 100
Time, ms
0
20
40
60
H
e
i
g
h
t
,
m
m
f = 0.5 kHz
f = 1.0 kHz
f = 2.0 kHz
f = 3.0 kHz
Fig. 10 Dependence of particle trajectory on frequency of bipolar oscillatory
and damped impulses having = 30,
l imp dc
10