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Smart Grid Fault Location, Isolation, and Service Restoration (FLISR) Solutions To Manage Operational and Capital Expenditures

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The paper discusses various Fault Location, Isolation and Service Restoration (FLISR) strategies with increasing CAPEX investment potential that can be used to improve the quality of supply on distribution networks. New technologies like distributed generation, renewables and electric vehicles are placing new demands that require increased network performance.

Some of the new technologies placing greater demands include distributed generation from small solar or wind, consumers selling unused generation back to the grid, and plug-in electric vehicles requiring energy to charge.

Supply quality and reliability are mainly measured using the System Average Interruption Duration Index (SAIDI) and the System Average Interruption Frequency Index (SAIFI). SAIDI measures average outage time per customer while SAIFI measures the total number of outages per customer.

1

Smart Grid Fault Location, Isolation, and


Service Restoration (FLISR) Solutions to
Manage Operational and Capital Expenditures
Adam Gauci, P.Eng.
Schneider Electric North America

AbstractWith new requirements being placed on the


distribution grid, the cost to consumers of poor supply
quality and low reliability is increasing. Consumers are
starting to demand higher levels of supply quality from
distribution network operators. This paper will discuss
various Fault Location, Isolation and Service Restoration
(FLISR) strategies with increasing CAPEX investment
potential that can be used to improve the quality of supply.

I.

INTRODUCTION

Increasing Demands Require Increased Performance


In North America today, one of the key issues facing
our distribution networks is the urgent need to make
capital investments to replace and upgrade the
sometimes neglected, aging distribution infrastructure.
Additionally, new technologies are placing greater
demands on this already stressed infrastructure. Some
of these new and emerging technologies include
distributed generation, renewables and plug-in electric
vehicles.
A. Distributed Generation and Renewables
Many governments are now mandating a certain
percentage of their energy portfolio in their jurisdiction
must come from clean sources.
Following this
requirement, the regulatory environment in many
jurisdictions has adapted to allow generation to
interface directly with the distribution grid. This is
causing traditional energy consumers to become energy
producers by allowing them to invest in generation such
as small roof top solar systems up to mid-size wind
farms, or by selling unused generation capacity from
co-generation plants back into the grid. This is creating
a veritable energy marketplace out of the distribution
system that will require a high degree of reliability as

producers seek to make their return on investment


(ROI).
B. Plug-In Electric Vehicles
With the ever increasing price of gasoline, consumers
are beginning to look for more cost-effective means of
transportation. The introduction of partially or fully
electric vehicles is seen as one of these lower cost
alternatives. Consumers of new electric vehicles will
require the supply of sufficient energy to charge their
vehicles at their homes and offices. Census data from
both Canada and the United States show that 72-75% of
commuters drive a vehicle as their primary mode of
transportation to their workplace. Sustained outages
can have the potential impact of interrupting a
consumers daily commute, leading to absenteeism and
greater economic disruption.
II. MEASURING QUALITY OF SUPPLY
Because the distribution system is made up of many
different stakeholders such as producers, consumers,
traders and network operators, it can often be difficult
to determine the basic level of system supply quality
and reliability. In North America, this responsibility
falls to regional energy regulators. Regulators can
entice distribution network operators to meet and even
exceed these levels by creating a framework for
performance-based rates.
The main criteria for measuring the quality of supply
are the System Average Interruption Duration Index
(SAIDI) and the System Average Interruption
Frequency Index (SAIFI).
SAIDI measures the average amount of time that
consumers are without service per consumer served and
is defined by the following equation:

SAIDI =

r N
i

Nt

(1)

Where Ni is the number of customers affected by an


outage, ri is the restoration time of an outage and Nt is
the total number of customers served.
SAIFI measures the total number of outages
experienced by consumers per consumer served and is
defined by the following equation:

SAIFI =

TABLE I
TYPICAL FINANCIAL LOSS PER OUTAGE
Industry
Semiconductor Production
Financial Trading
Computer Center
Telecommunications
Steel Works
Glass Industry

Cost
$5,300,000
$8,400,000 per hour
$1,000,000
$45,000 per minute
$500,000
$350 000

(2)
.
Nt
Where Ni is the number of customers affected by an
outage and Nt is the total number of customers served.
Usually outages of less than 1-3 minutes are not
counted towards the SAIDI or SAIFI metrics.
i

III. THE COSTS OF SUPPLY QUALITY


The cost of supply quality can be borne by both
consumers of energy and distribution network
operators.

Fig. 1. Costs versus Quality of Supply.

When considering the interruption costs for consumers


because of low supply quality together with the costs
for distribution network operators to implement supply
quality improvements, the optimum supply quality can
be found as the minimum cost.
A. Energy Consumers
The cost of an outage for commercial and industrial
consumers can have a direct economic impact on their
operations.

Source: The Costs of Poor Power Quality, David


Chapman, Copper Development Association, July 2002.

Add to this new demands on our distribution network


based on emerging technologies, and the added costs of
outages for energy consumers can have even greater
economic impact.
B. Distribution Network Operators
Because of the trend in increasing consumer costs
due to supply interruption, distribution network
operators will be forced to increasingly invest more to
maintain the optimal supply quality level. One such
solution to increase supply quality is Fault Location,
Isolation and Service Restoration (FLISR).
This
solution can easily help reduce the SAIDI metric by
allowing operators to locate and react to outages much
more quickly. It can also help to lessen OPEX
expenditures by reducing the amount of time crews are
required to try and manually locate faults on the
distribution network. Further, functionality to automate
the service restoration process can restore many
customers before the 1-3 minute limit, enabling
reduction in both SAIDI and SAIFI.
The remainder of this paper will focus on
evolutionary FLISR strategies that can be implemented
by distribution network operators with increasing
CAPEX investment, as needed, to meet increasing
supply quality requirements.
IV. FAULT PASSAGE INDICATORS
The traditional method for locating faults on the
distribution network can be a very tedious task. Crews
are dispatched to the faulted feeder and try to predict the
fault location. Using a hit and miss method of isolating
sections of the faulted feeder, crews will reclose the
substation breaker, or other network protective devices,
such as reclosers, to validate that the faulted feeder
section is downstream from the isolation point. This
can create unnecessary wear on protective equipment on
the feeder being tested, resulting in decreased
equipment life and increased time required for
maintenance. It also increases the risk of creating
additional faults on the feeder as weak isolation points
are stressed. Multiple faults on a feeder can create

additional complexity for the crew as they try to locate


the faulted section.
One solution to help crews locate a fault and rule out
healthy sections of a feeder is the addition of fault
passage indicators (FPI) at strategically located points
along a feeder. Solutions for fault passage indication
exist for both overhead and underground networks.
One such solution for overhead networks is FPIs that
can clip-on to overhead lines. The FPIs operate by
monitoring the current at a specific point on the line.
To detect a fault, they monitor the line for a loss of
voltage following a sudden high impulse current (dI/dt)
over a 30ms period, or an overcurrent condition set to a
preset value. Upon detecting a fault downstream from
the FPI, the FPI will provide a visible indication by
flashing a set of high-intensity LEDs. The crews can
then follow the feeder and the flashing FPIs until they
locate an inactivated FPI (one that has not activated the
flashing LEDs). The crew will then know that the fault
is located between the last active and first inactive FPI,
allowing them to focus their efforts on a much smaller
feeder section.

Fig 2. Overhead clip-on fault passage indicators.

SAIDI values can be significantly reduced by helping


crews locate faults and reducing the time required for
diagnostic testing. Maintenance costs for protective
devices in the network can also be reduced by
eliminating the need to repeatedly close onto faults.
FPIs can easily be added to the distribution network
with very minimal CAPEX investment, making them an
excellent starting point for helping operators to improve
their quality of supply. The ROI for adding FPIs can
usually be realized in 6-12 months.

V. ADDING COMMUNICATIONS
Typically, communications has only extended to the
distribution substations, allowing operators the ability to
detect faults that trip feeder breakers only. This leaves
consumers to report outages caused by faults that
operate other protective devices outside the substation
fence, such as reclosers or fuses. This means that the
time it takes to detect a fault is reliant upon the
consumer.
Deciding on the right communications medium
depends on many unique factors, such as physical or
geographical limitations that are specific to different
distribution network operators. Some of the many
choices for communication mediums include
licensed/unlicensed
radio,
cellular
technology,
broadband over power line, fiber optic cabling or even
piggy-backing on mesh networks that are being
implemented for Advanced Metering Infrastructure
(AMI).
Adding communications capabilities to
distribution network devices outside of the substation
fence can lead to improvements in real-time situational
awareness and even allow for some remote control
capabilities.
Devices exist today that can easily
communicate to a network operators supervisory
control and data acquisition (SCADA) system using
standard protocols such as DNP3 or MODBUS. Some
of the benefits are specifically related to communicating
fault passage indicators and protective/isolation devices
such as reclosers and sectionalizers.
A. Communicating Fault Passage Indicators
Communicating FPIs operate along the same
principles as non-communicating FPIs, except that upon
the loss of voltage on a feeder; the outage can be
immediately reported to the distribution network
operator. Because the communicating FPIs can also
transmit information if they have detected the passage
of a fault current, the operator can determine the general
location of a fault. The operator can quickly dispatch a
crew directly to the faulted section of the feeder,
significantly reducing the time it takes to report and
locate the fault on the feeder, while also having a
minimizing effect on the operators SAIDI value. The
ROI for communicating FPIs can be realized in 1-2
years.
As an added benefit, communicating FPIs can also
provide metering information on average, minimum and
maximum current values for the line. This information
could be used to help optimize an operators asset
management program or to help detect distribution
network irregularities.

Fig 3. Overhead communicating fault passage indicators.

One such overhead communicating FPI solution


today employs a pole mounted remote terminal unit
(RTU) that communicates with three or more FPIs
through radio communications.
There are some
additional solution health benefits from using an RTU
as a receiver, such as the ability to monitor FPI signal
strength or battery level. This information can be
reported back to an operator who can schedule
maintenance at the first sign of potential trouble. The
RTU can also be used to concentrate the FPI sensors to
help optimize communication costs by reducing the
number of cellular subscriptions or radio units required.
B. Reclosers and Sectionalizers
SCADA communications can also be extended to
many existing reclosers and sectionalizers in the
distribution network by interfacing communications
technology such as radios to the existing controller.
This will not only allow improved situational awareness
by reporting switchgear statuses, currents and voltages,
but also allow for remote control operation of the
switchgear.
In some cases, legacy recloser controls may not have
the capability to communicate through conventional
means or, in the case of some sectionalizers, not be
equipped with a controller. In these cases an integrated
RTU (iRTU) can be retrofitted to the switchgear either
through an output contact to an existing controller or
directly. Some iRTUs contain backup power supplies
that can provide enough power to operate sectionalizers
and allow for control of the switchgear during an
outage. Other iRTU features include the ability to
include current transformer (CT) and voltage
transformer (VT) inputs for metering, and integrated
communications technology such as radios or cellular
communications.
Like the monitoring of the feeder breakers at the
substation, adding the communications infrastructure
outside the substation allows distribution network

operators to immediately be informed when one of the


protective devices, such as reclosers, has operated.
Data reported by the switchgear controllers and iRTUs
on the feeder, along with FPIs can aid in quickly
locating fault occurrences. With the operators ability
to control the feeder switchgear, the operator can
manually isolate the faulted area of the feeder by
sending control commands to reclosers and
sectionalizers. Once the faulted area on the feeder is
isolated, the operator can remotely restore service to the
remainder of the feeder consumers by closing the
breaker or recloser upstream of the isolated segment and
by closing any possible normally open points
downstream of the isolated segment.
While
communicating with reclosers and sectionalizers does
aid in fault location, the added value can be realized in
remotely isolating the fault and restoring service to
some of the consumers on an affected feeder, while
quickly minimizing the impact on consumers and the
distribution network operators SAIDI metric.
VI. ADDING REGIONAL DISTRIBUTED INTELLIGENCE
The next step after installing communications
capabilities to the many intelligent devices on the
distribution network is to add some distributed
intelligence at a regional level. One such method for
accomplishing this is to place an intelligent controller at
the distribution substation level.
This regional
controller can contain a real-time data model with data
collected from the intelligent devices on the feeders
connected to the substation, distributed generation and
neighboring substations.
The intelligent controller would be reliant on
communications to regional devices to adequately
manage the region, while the controller should be able
to act independently and not have reliance on any
centralized intelligence from the distribution network
level. Because of the regional awareness the intelligent
controller possesses, it can easily assist in better
determining fault location, making some automatic
switching decisions and managing distributed
generation connections.
A. Fault Location Determination
Many rural feeders are radial and cover long
distances.
This means the distance between the
placement of FPIs on the distribution feeder can be
large, requiring crews to spend greater amounts of time
searching the feeder to locate the fault. Since regional
intelligent controllers have awareness of real-time data
such as voltages and currents collected from protective
devices inside and outside the substation, they can help
to more accurately predict the location of the fault using
the fault current method. The fault current method for
detecting the location of faults uses the magnitude of

the short-circuit current during the last cycle before the


protective device operates and the type of fault detected.
From this information, a fault simulation can be
performed using the pre-programmed parameters for the
feeders to predict the location of the fault. In urban
areas, this method of fault location prediction should be
used in conjunction with fault passage indicators due to
the added complexity of the network and various feeder
branches which could lead to the fault current method
predicting multiple fault locations.

be used to implement and restore service after planned


outages.

B. Automatic Switching
After determining the location of the fault on the
feeder, the intelligent controller can take some actions
to issue controls to sectionalizers to isolate the fault as
tightly as possible. Once isolation is completed, the
controller can restore service to consumers upstream of
the isolated feeder section. In some cases the controller
could even automatically restore service to consumers
downstream of the isolated section by closing a
normally open point between two adjoining feeders.
Care should be taken before allowing this type of
operation to ensure there is no possibility of
overloading the adjoining feeder.
Fig 4. Predicted restoration load and options for resupply.

C. Distributed Generation Management


With the new regulated requirement of distributed
generators connecting to feeders, multiple supply
sources need to be disconnected from the feeder when a
fault occurs. Since the intelligent controller is aware of
the status of all protective elements along a given
feeder, it can issue disconnect commands to distributed
generators downstream from the operated device as per
the distribution network operators grid code.
VII. ADDING CENTRALIZED INTELLIGENCE
Centralized intelligence, such as a distribution
management system (DMS), can be implemented with a
real-time awareness of the complete distribution
network. All decisions are made based on the current
state of the network instead of using a worst-case, preengineered solution. Detailed models also provide load
simulations that can assist with detecting faults in the
distribution network. The DMS is aware of pre-fault
loading plus outage duration and can predict the cold
load pickup current expected when re-energizing the
feeder section. This allows for enhanced isolation and
service restoration algorithms which can be executed as
a man in the middle approach with the SCADA
operator interacting with the suggested restoration steps,
or fully automatic with the restoration steps executed in
a closed loop control method using fully SCADAcontrolled equipment.
The DMS can produce
restoration switching steps as a result of a fault or can

A. Fault Location
For protective devices that are difficult to monitor,
such as fuses, simulation of the expected loading on a
feeder can help to predict when and where these devices
have operated. This, along with data from customer
reporting calls and information on planned outages, can
be used to help operators hone their ability to locate
faults.
B. Fault Isolation and Service Restoration
With the DMS system having a global overview of
the entire network, the system can easily determine
optimal switching routines that can restore the
maximum number of consumers while taking into
consideration priority customers and the rating of
specific feeders. This global view is important to
ensure the transfer of load from one feeder to another
does not cause overloading on the feeder that is picking
up the load. For feeders that contain isolation devices
that dont have remote control capabilities, the DMS
can provide a list of switching operations that can be
performed manually by the dispatched crew. The DMS
system can also compute a list of alternative switching
scenarios for operator selection.
The FLISR algorithms of the DMS can be initiated
manually by the operator to reconfigure feeders due to
planned outages or scheduled maintenance work.
When feeders are operating in non-standard
configurations that are outside of normal operations, the

DMS system can block the distributed automatic feeder


reconfiguration at the regional level and issue switching
orders from the DMS level only. The result is fully
coordinated, central-decentralized intelligence.
C. Future Considerations
Many of the intelligent devices in place today in the
distribution network have the ability to record wave
form captures of detected distribution network faults.
Future DMS systems will have the capability to collect
and analyze these wave form captures and predict the
cause of different types of faults based on specific fault
signatures. For example, based on the fault signature of
a tree branch falling on a feeder, the operator would
immediately know that he also needs to dispatch a
forestry crew to a specific fault location.
Future prediction tools will provide an analysis of
trends of transient events to help predict future failure
modes. Distribution network operators can then use this
information to provide warning of future outages and
schedule maintenance before an outage or fault occurs.
VIII. CONCLUSION
With new technologies and consumer requirements
placing greater demand on the distribution grid,
additional pressure from consumers and regulators is
being felt by distribution network operators to improve
the level of power supply quality. Providing greater
reliability can be accomplished by implementing
different Fault Location, Isolation and Service
Restoration strategies which can be measured by a
relative reduction in the operators SAIDI metric. This
paper highlights some of the FLISR solutions that can
be used to help reduce the SAIDI metric with varying
degrees of CAPEX investment. Investments in FLISR
can easily evolve over time and are scalable in terms of
cost and complexity as new requirements demand.
Additional operational and maintenance efficiencies can
also be recognized from investments in FLISR
strategies that can also help justify the CAPEX
investments.
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[2]

[3]

[4]

Y. Chollot, J.M. Biasse and A. Mallot, Feeder Automation


Improves Medium Voltage Network Efficiency, presented at
CIRED Conference, Frankfurt, Germany, June. 23-24, 2008.
M.J. Domingue and J. Chaves, News in Fault Passage
Indicators in Overhead and Underground MV Lines, presented
at CIRED Conference, Barcelona, Spain, May 12-15, 2003.
J.D. Kueck, B.J. Kirby, P.N. Overholt and L.C. Markel,
Measurement Practices for Reliability and Power Quality,
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN Rep.
ORNL/TM-2004/91, 2004.
K. Keller and B.F.C. Franken, "Quality of Supply Market
Regulation Survey within Europe," Kema Labratories, Arnhem,
Netherlands Rep. 30630505-TDC 06-59095A, 2006.

[5]
[6]

Fault Location, Isolation and Supply Restoration, Technical


Specification, Telvent DMS, February 2012.
Telvent DMS Functional Overview 2.0, Technical
Specification, Telvent DMS, January 2011.

Adam F. Gauci was born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada and received a


Bachelors of Science in computer engineering from Queens
University at Kingston, Ontario.
His previous work experience includes Hydro One Networks as a
Protection and Control Engineer and Cooper Power Systems as a Field
Application Engineer. Currently he is working with Smart Grid
Solutions at the Schneider Electric North American Energy
Automation Center in Toronto, Ontario.
Mr. Gauci is currently a member of the IEEE Power and Energy
Society and a registered professional engineer in the province of
Ontario.

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