Professional Documents
Culture Documents
By
Jijo Francis
ANGAMALY-683577,
Affiliated to
Mookkannoor P O, Angamaly-683577.
Affiliated to
CERTIFICATE
This is to certify that this report entitled “HVDC TECHNOLOGY AND SHORT
CIRCUIT CONTRIBUTION OF HVDC LIGHT” is a bonafide report of the seminar
presented during 7th semester by JIJO FRANCIS (57164) in partial fulfillment of the
requirements for the award of the degree of Bachelor of Technology (B.Tech) in Electrical
& Electronics Engineering during the academic year 2010-2011.
Date:
Place: Mookkannoor
ABSTRACT
The development of HVDC (High Voltage Direct Current) transmission system dates back
to the 1930s when mercury arc rectifiers were invented. Since the 1960s, HVDC
transmission system is now a mature technology and has played a vital part in both long
distance transmission and in the interconnection of systems. Transmitting power at high
voltage and in DC form instead of AC is a new technology proven to be economic and
simple in operation which is HVDC transmission. HVDC transmission systems, when
installed, often form the backbone of an electric power system. They combine high
reliability with a long useful life. An HVDC link avoids some of the disadvantages and
limitations of AC transmission. HVDC transmission refers to that the AC power generated
at a power plant is transformed into DC power before its transmission. At the inverter
(receiving side), it is then transformed back into its original AC power and then supplied to
each household. Such power transmission method makes it possible to transmit electric
power in an economic way.
Chapter 1 INTRODUCTION 1
Chapter 5 CONCLUSION 31
Chapter 6 REFERENCES 32
HVDC TECHNOLOGY AND SHORT CIRCUIT CONTRIBUTION OF HVDC LIGHT
1. INTRODUCTION
The development of HVDC (High Voltage Direct Current) transmission system dates back
to the 1930s when mercury arc rectifiers were invented. In 1941, the first HVDC
transmission system contract for a commercial HVDC system was placed: 60MWwere to
be supplied to the city of Berlin through an underground cable of 115 km in length. It was
only in 1954 that the first HVDC (10MW) transmission system was commissioned in
Gotland. Since the 1960s, HVDC transmission system is now a mature technology and has
played a vital part in both long distance transmission and in the interconnection of
systems.HVDC transmission systems, when installed, often form the backbone of an
electric power system. They combine high reliability with a long useful life. Their core
component is the power converter, which serves as the interface to the AC transmission
system. The conversion from AC to DC, and vice versa, is achieved by controllable
electronic switches (valves) in a 3-phase bridge configuration.
2. HVDC TECHNOLOGY
Electric power transmission was originally developed with direct current. A high-voltage,
direct current (HVDC) electric power transmission system uses direct current for the bulk
transmission of electrical power, in contrast with the more common alternating
current systems. For long-distance transmission, HVDC systems may be less expensive and
suffer lower electrical losses. For shorter distances, the higher cost of DC conversion
equipment compared to an AC system may be warranted where other benefits of direct
current links are useful.
High voltage is used for electric power transmission to reduce the energy lost in
the resistance of the wires. For a given quantity of power transmitted, higher voltage
reduces the transmission power loss. The power lost as heat in the wires is proportional to
the square of the current. So if a given power is transmitted at higher voltage and lower
current, power loss in the wires is reduced. Power loss can also be reduced by reducing
resistance, for example by increasing the diameter of the conductor, but larger conductors
are heavier and more expensive.
High voltages cannot easily be used for lighting and motors, and so transmission-level
voltages must be reduced to values compatible with end-use equipment. Transformers are
used to change the voltage level in alternating current (AC) transmission circuits. The
competition between the direct current (DC) of Thomas Edison and the AC of Nikola
Tesla and George Westinghouse was known as the War of Currents, with AC becoming
dominant. Practical manipulation of DC voltages became possible with the development of
high power electronic devices such as mercury arc valves and, more recently,
semiconductor devices such as thyristors, insulated-gate bipolar transistors (IGBTs), high
power MOSFETs and gate turn-off thyristors (GTOs).
DC transmission now became practical when long distances were to be covered or where
cables were required. The development of HVDC (High Voltage Direct Current)
transmission system dates back to the 1930s when mercury arc rectifiers were invented.
HVDC transmission systems, when installed, often form the backbone of an electric power
system. They combine high reliability with a long useful life. Their core component is the
power converter, which serves as the interface to the AC transmission system. The
conversion from AC to DC, and vice versa, is achieved by controllable electronic switches
(valves) in a 3-phase bridge configuration.
An HVDC link avoids some of the disadvantages and limitations of AC transmission and
has the following advantages:
1. An overhead dc transmission line with its towers can be designed to be less costly per
unit of length than an equivalent ac. line designed to transmit the same level of
electric power. However the dc converter stations at each end are more costly than
the terminating stations of an ac line and so there is a breakeven distance above
which the total cost of dc transmission is less than its ac transmission alternative.
The dc transmission line can have a lower visual profile than an equivalent ac line
and so contributes to a lower environmental impact. There are other environmental
advantages to a dc transmission line through the electric and magnetic fields being
dc instead of ac.
3. Some ac electric power systems are not synchronized to neighboring networks even
though their physical distances between them is quite small. This occurs in Japan
where half the country is a 60 Hz network and the other is a 50 Hz system. It is
physically impossible to connect the two together by direct ac methods in order to
exchange electric power between them. However, if a dc converter station is located
in each system with an interconnecting dc link between them, it is possible to transfer
the required power flow even though the ac systems so connected remain
asynchronous.
Long undersea / underground high voltage cables have a high electrical capacitance, since
the conductors are surrounded by a relatively thin layer of insulation and a metal sheath
while the extensive length of the cable multiplies the area between the conductors. The
geometry is that of a long co-axial capacitor. Where alternating current is used for cable
transmission, this capacitance appears in parallel with load. Additional current must flow in
the cable to charge the cable capacitance, which generates additional losses in the
conductors of the cable. Additionally, there is a dielectric loss component in the material of
the cable insulation, which consumes power.
When, however, direct current is used, the cable capacitance is charged only when the cable
is first energized or when the voltage is changed; there is no steady-state additional current
required. For a long AC undersea cable, the entire current-carrying capacity of the
conductor could be used to supply the charging current alone.
The cable capacitance issue limits the length and power carrying capacity of AC cables. DC
cables have no such limitation, and are essentially bound by only Ohm's Law. Although
some DC leakage current continues to flow through the dielectric insulators, this is very
small compared to the cable rating and much less than with AC transmission cables. HVDC
can carry more power per conductor because, for a given power rating, the constant voltage
in a DC line is the same as the peak voltage in an AC line. The power delivered in an AC
system is defined by the root mean square (RMS) of an AC voltage, but RMS is only about
71% of the peak voltage. The peak voltage of AC determines the actual insulation thickness
and conductor spacing. Because DC operates at a constant maximum voltage, this allows
existing transmission line corridors with equally sized conductors and insulation to carry
more power into an area of high power consumption than AC, which can lower costs.
2.3 DISADVANTAGES:
The disadvantages of HVDC are in conversion, switching, control, availability and
maintenance..HVDC is less reliable and has lower availability than AC systems, mainly
due to the extra conversion equipment. Single pole systems have availability of about
98.5%, with about a third of the downtime unscheduled due to faults. Fault redundant
bipole systems provide high availability for 50% of the link capacity, but availability of the
full capacity is about 97% to 98%.
The required static inverters are expensive and have limited overload capacity.
At smaller transmission distances the losses in the static inverters may be bigger than in an
AC transmission line. The cost of the inverters may not be offset by reductions in line
construction cost and lower line loss. With two exceptions, all former mercury rectifiers
worldwide have been dismantled or replaced by thyristor units. Pole 1 of the HVDC
scheme between the North and South Islands of New Zealand still uses mercury arc
rectifiers, as does Pole 1 of the Vancouver Island link in Canada. Both are currently being
replaced – in New Zealand by a new thyristor pole and in Canada by a three-phase AC link.
In contrast to AC systems, realizing multi-terminal systems is complex, as is expanding
existing schemes to multi-terminal systems.
2.4.1 Components
Most of the HVDC systems in operation today are based on Line-Commutated Converters.
Early static systems used mercury arc rectifiers, which were unreliable. Two HVDC
systems using mercury arc rectifiers are still in service (As of 2008). The thyristor valve
was first used in HVDC systems in the 1960s. The thyristor is a solid-
state semiconductor device similar to the diode, but with an extra control terminal that is
used to switch the device on at a particular instant during the AC cycle. The insulated-gate
bipolar transistor (IGBT) is now also used, forming a Voltage Sourced Converter, and
offers simpler control, reduced harmonics and reduced valve cost.
Because the voltages in HVDC systems, up to 800 kV in some cases, exceed
the breakdown voltages of the semiconductor devices, HVDC converters are built using
large numbers of semiconductors in series. The low-voltage control circuits used to switch
the thyristors on and off need to be isolated from the high voltages present on the
transmission lines.
This is usually done optically. In a hybrid control system, the low-voltage control
electronics sends light pulses along optical fibers to the high-side control electronics.
Another system, called direct light triggering, dispenses with the high-side electronics,
instead using light pulses from the control electronics to switch light-triggered thyristors. A
complete switching element is commonly referred to as a valve, irrespective of its
construction.
Rectification and inversion use essentially the same machinery. Many substations
(Converter Stations) are set up in such a way that they can act as both rectifiers and
inverters. At the AC end a set of transformers, often three physically separated single-phase
transformers, isolate the station from the AC supply, to provide a local earth, and to ensure
the correct eventual DC voltage. The output of these transformers is then connected to a
bridge rectifier formed by a number of valves. The basic configuration uses six valves,
connecting each of the three phases to each of the two DC rails. However, with a phase
change only every sixty degrees, considerable harmonics remain on the DC rails.
In addition to the conversion transformers and valve-sets, various passive resistive and
reactive components help filter harmonics out of the DC rails.
Therefore it is a type of single wire earth return. The issues surrounding earth-return current
include:
Electrochemical corrosion of long buried metal objects such as pipelines.
Underwater earth-return electrodes in seawater may produce chlorine or otherwise
affect water chemistry.
An unbalanced current path may result in a net magnetic field, which can affect
magnetic navigational compasses for ships passing over an underwater cable.
These effects can be eliminated with installation of a metallic return conductor between the
two ends of the monopolar transmission line. Since one terminal of the converters is
connected to earth, the return conductor need not be insulated for the full transmission
voltage which makes it less costly than the high-voltage conductor.
2.5.2 Bipolar
In bipolar transmission a pair of conductors is used, each at a high potential with respect to
ground, in opposite polarity. Since these conductors must be insulated for the full voltage,
transmission line cost is higher than a monopole with a return conductor.
Figure 2: Block diagram of a bipolar system that also has an earth return.
However, there are a number of advantages to bipolar transmission which can make it the
attractive option.
Under normal load, negligible earth-current flows, as in the case of monopolar
transmission with a metallic earth-return. This reduces earth return loss and
environmental effects.
When a fault develops in a line, with earth return electrodes installed at each end of
the line, approximately half the rated power can continue to flow using the earth as
a return path, operating in monopolar mode.
Since for a given total power rating each conductor of a bipolar line carries only
half the current of monopolar lines, the cost of the second conductor is reduced
compared to a monopolar line of the same rating.
In very adverse terrain, the second conductor may be carried on an independent set
of transmission towers, so that some power may continue to be transmitted even if
one line is damaged.
A bipolar system may also be installed with a metallic earth return conductor.
Bipolar systems may carry as much as 3,200 MW at voltages of +/-600 kV. Submarine
cable installations initially commissioned as a monopole may be upgraded with additional
cables and operated as a bipole.
The length of the direct current line is kept as short as possible. HVDC back-to-back
stations are used for:
Coupling of electricity mains of different frequency (as in Japan; and the GCC
interconnection between UAE [50 Hz] and Saudi Arabia [60 Hz] under construction
in ±2009–2011).
Coupling two networks of the same nominal frequency but no fixed phase
relationship (as until 1995/96 in Etzenricht, Dürnrohr, Vienna, and the Vyborg
HVDC scheme).
Different frequency and phase number (for example, as a replacement for traction
current converter plants).
The DC voltage in the intermediate circuit can be selected freely at HVDC back-to-back
stations because of the short conductor length. The DC voltage is as low as possible, in
order to build a small valve hall and to avoid series connections of valves. For this reason at
HVDC back-to-back stations valves with the highest available current rating are used.
Parallel configuration tends to be used for large capacity stations, and series for lower
capacity stations. An example is the 2,000 MW Quebec - New England
Transmission system opened in 1992, which is currently the largest multi-terminal HVDC
system in the world.
In particular, the polarity of the ions emitted can be controlled, which may have an
environmental impact on particulate condensation. (particles of different polarities have a
different mean-free path.) Negative coronas generate considerably more ozone
than positive coronas, and generate it further downwind of the power line, creating the
potential for health effects. The use of a positive voltage will reduce the ozone impacts of
monopole HVDC power lines.
Gate-turn-off thyristors (GTOs) and insulated gate bipole transistors (IGBTs) are required
for the voltage source converter (VSC) converter bridge configuration. It is the VSC
converter bridge which is being applied in new developments . Its special properties include
the ability to independently control real and reactive power at the connection bus to the ac
system. Reactive power can be either capacitive or inductive and can be controlled to
quickly change from one to the other.
A voltage source converter as in inverter does not require an active ac voltage source to
commutate into as does the conventional line commutated converter. The VSC inverter
can generate an ac three phase voltage and supply electricity to a load as the only source
of power. It does require harmonic filtering, harmonic cancellation or pulse width
modulation to provide an acceptable ac voltage wave shape.
Two applications are now available for the voltage source converter. The first is for low
voltage dc converters applied to dc distribution systems. The first application of a dc
distribution system in 1997 was developed in Sweden and known as “HVDC Light”.
Other applications for a dc distribution system may be:
The second immediate application for the VSC converter bridges is in back-to-back
configuration. The back-to-back VSC link is the ultimate transmission and power flow
controller. It can control and reverse power flow easily, and control reactive power
independently on each side. With a suitable control system, it can control power to
enhance and preserve ac system synchronism, and act as a rapid phase angle power flow
regulator with 360 degree range of control.
There is considerable flexibility in the configuration of the VSC converter bridges. Many
two level converter bridges can be assembled with appropriate harmonic cancellation
properties in order to generate acceptable ac system voltage wave shapes. Another option
is to use multilevel converter bridges to provide harmonic cancellation. Additionally,
both two level and multilevel converter bridges can utilize pulse width modulation to
eliminate low order harmonics. With pulse width modulation, high pass filters may still
be required since PWM adds to the higher order harmonics.
As VSC converter bridge technology develops for higher dc voltage applications, it will
be possible to eliminate converter transformers. This is possible with the low voltage
applications in use today. It is expected the exciting developments in power electronics
will continue to provide exciting new configurations and applications for HVDC
converters.
HVDC Light consists of only two elements: a converter station and a pair of ground cables.
The converters are voltage source converters, VSC’s. The outputs from the VSC’s are
determined by the control system, which does not require any communications links
between the different converter stations. Also, they don’t need to rely on the AC network’s
ability to keep the voltage and frequency stable. These feature make it possible to connect
the converters to the points bests suited for the
ac system as a whole.
The converter station is designed for a power range of 1-100 MW and for a dc voltage in
the 10-100 kV range. One such station occupies an area of less than 250 sq. meters (2 700
sq. ft), and consists of ust a few elements: two containers for the converters and the control
system, three small AC air-core reactors, a simple harmonics filter and some cooling fans.
The converters are using a set of six valves, two for each phase, equipped with high power
transistors, IGBT (Insulated Gate Bipolar Transistor). The valves are controlled by a
computerized control system by pulse width modulation, PWM. Since the IGBTs can be
switched on or off
at will, the output voltages and currents on the AC side can be controlled precisely.
The control system automatically adjusts the voltage, frequency and flow of active and
reactive power according to the needs of the AC system. The PWM technology has been
tried and tested for two decades in switched power supplies for electronic equipment as
computers. Due to the new, high power IGBTs, the PWM technology can now be used for
high power applications as electric power transmission
.HVDC Light can be used with regular overhead transmission lines, but it reaches its full
potential when used with a new kind of dc cable. The new HVDC Light cable is an
extruded, single-pole cable.
The easiest way of laying this cable is by plowing. Handling the cable is easy, despite its
large power-carrying capacity. It has a specific weight of just over 1 kg/m. Contrary to the
case with AC transmission; distance is not the factor that determines the line voltage. The
only limit is the cost of the line losses, which may be lowered by choosing a cable with a
conductor with a larger cross section. Thus, the cost of a pair of dc cables is linear with
distance.
A dc cable connection could be more cost efficient than even a medium distance AC
overhead line, or local generating units such as diesel generators. The converter stations can
be used in different grid configurations. A single station can connect a dc load or generating
unit, such as a photo-voltaic power plant, with an AC grid.
Two converter stations and a pair of cables make a point-to point dc transmission with AC
connections at each end. Three or more converter stations make up a dc grid that can be
connected to one or more points in the AC grid or to different AC grids. The dc grids can
be radial with multi-drop converters, meshed or a combination of both. In other words, they
can be configured, changed and expanded in much the same way AC grids are.
The transformers are used to step-up/step-down voltages and the converters units converts
AC to DC and vice versa. HVDC cables are used to carry currents and the filters are used
for filtering unwanted signals.
The control makes it possible to create any phase angle or amplitude, which can be done
almost instantly. This offers the possibility to control both active and reactive power
independently. As a consequence, no reactive power compensation equipment is needed at
the station, only an AC-filter is installed.
While the transmitted active power is kept constant the reactive power controller can
automatically control the voltage in the AC-network. Reactive power generation and
consumption of an HVDC Light converter can be used for compensating the needs of the
connected network within the rating of a converter. As the rating of the converters is based
on maximum currents and voltages the reactive power capabilities of a converter can be
traded against the active power capability.
The fact that a Light converter can feed power into a passive network makes it very robust
and can easily accommodate alterations in the AC-grid to where it is connected. This is a
very valuable property in a deregulated electricity market where AC-network conditions in
the future will change more frequently than in a regulated market.
The HVDC Light extruded cable is the outcome of a comprehensive development program,
where space charge accumulation, resistivity and electrical breakdown strength were
identified as the most important material properties when selecting the insulation system.
The selected material gives cables with high mechanical strength, high flexibility and low
weight. Extruded HVDC Light cables systems in bipolar configuration have both technical
and environmental advantages. The cables are small yet robust and can be installed by
plowing, making the installation fast and economical.
3.3 APPLICATIONS
Cables are rarely met with any public opposition, and the electromagnetic field from a dc
cable pair is very low, and also a static field. Usually, the process of obtaining the rights for
laying an underground cable is much easier, quicker and cheaper than for an overhead line.
A pair of HVDC Light cables can be plowed into the ground. Despite their large power
capacity, they can be put in place with the same equipment as ordinary, AC high voltage
distribution cables. Thus, HVDC Light is ideally suited for feeding power into growing
metropolitan areas from a suburban substation.
Also, the pollution and noise produced when the diesel fuel is transported will be
completely eliminated by an HVDC line, as the need for frequent maintenance of the
diesels. Since the cost of building an HVDC Light line is a linear function of the distance, a
break-even might be reached for as short distances as 50 - 60 kilometers.
Two AC grids, adjacent to each other but running asynchronously with respect to each
other, cannot exchange any power between each other. If there is a surplus of generating
capacity in one of the grids it cannot be utilized in the other grid. Each of the networks
must have its own capacity of peak power generation, usually in the form of older,
inefficient fuel fossil plants, or diesel or gas turbine units. Thus, peak power generation is
often a source of substantial pollution, and their fuel economy is frequently bad. A DC link,
connecting two such networks, can be used for combining the generation capacities of both
networks. Cheap surplus power from one network can replace peak power generation in the
other. This will result in both reduced pollution levels and increased fuel economy. The
power exchange between the networks is also very easy to measure accurately.
The HVDC Light transmission system mainly consists of two cables and two converter
stations. Each converter station is composed of a voltage source converter (VSC) built up
with IGBTs, phase reactors, ac filters and transformer. By using pulse width modulation
(PWM), the amplitude and phase angle (even the frequency) of the converter AC output
voltage can be adjusted simultaneously.
Since the AC side voltage holds two degrees of control freedom, independent active and
reactive power control can be realized. Regarding the active power control, the feedback
control loop can be formulized such that either tracks the predetermined active power order,
or tracks the given DC
voltage reference. This gives two different control modes, i.e., active power control mode
(Pctrl) and DC voltage control mode (Udc ctrl). If one station is selected to control the
power, namely, in Pctrl mode, the other station should set to control the DC voltage,
namely, in Udc ctrl mode.
Regarding the reactive power control, the feedback control loop can be formulized such
that it either tracks the predetermined reactive power order, or tracks the given AC voltage
reference. This also gives two control modes, i.e., reactive power control mode (Qctrl) and
AC voltage control mode (Uac ctrl). The two control modes can be chosen freely as desired
in each station.
Under the normal operation condition, the VSC can be seen as a voltage source. However,
under abnormal operation conditions, for instance, during an ac short-circuit fault, the VSC
may be seen as a current source, as the current capacity of the VSC is limited and
controllable.
The studied AC system has a mixture structure in radial and mesh connection. It includes
high, medium and low voltage buses. The AC transmission lines are modeled with p-link.
The loads are constant current loads. Three types of fault, namely, the close-in fault; the
near-by fault and the distant fault, are applied at bus A, B and C, respectively. A 3-ph
close-in fault results in a voltage
reduction of almost 100%, whereas a 3-ph near-by fault and distant fault result in voltage
reduction on CCP bus of about 80% and 20%, respectively. In the following discussion, the
short circuit ratio (SCR) is defined as the short circuit capacity of the AC system observed
at CCP divided with the power rating of the converter.
The possible maximum relative short circuit current increment (∆Imax) is determined by
the short circuit ratio (SCR). Supposing that the ∆Imax is defined as (1), it is found that the
∆Imax is inversely in proportional to the SCR as the solid curve shown in Figure 6.
where, Isc is the short-circuit current of the original AC system alone at a 3-ph fault and I
SC_HVDC_L , is the short-circuit current of the AC system with converter station connected and
in operation at the same fault. It should be noticed that the solid curve in Figure 6 is valid
if there is no tap-changer, or the tap-change is at the position corresponding to the nominal
winding ratio. If there is a tap changer
in transformer, the AC network will observe a different current although the maximum
current of the
converter is a fixed value. Therefore, the maximum possible short circuit current increment
is in the boundary defined by the two dashed curves. AC networks with SCR equal to 1.85,
3.14 and 12 have been simulated and the results are also
shown in figure 6 with black dots.
Different control modes and different operation points may change the short circuit current
contribution from the VSC. However, it will not be higher than the ∆Imax. For instance, the
short circuit current contribution from the VSC will not exceed 12% if the SCR is 10 and
voltage tap-change range is ± 20%.
The current is mainly limited by the impedances of transmission lines and transformers
when a short circuit occurs. Since the impedance of lines and transformers is dominated by
the inductive impedance, the short circuit current is mainly consisted of reactive current.
Because of that, the choice of different control modes in respect of the active power control
does not give any impact to the short circuit current. Therefore, the following discussion
will focus on the choice between the control modes Qctrl and Uac ctrl.
It is important to notice that the change of short circuit current and the variation of bus
voltages usually go hand in hand. The increase of short circuit current, namely, the increase
of short circuit capacity, will improve the voltage stability and minimize the reduction of
bus voltage due to
faults. Inversely, the reduction of short circuit current may leads to voltage instability and
voltage collapse during faults, in particular in weak AC systems. With Uac ctrl control
mode, the reactive current generation will be automatically increased when the AC voltage
decreases. Therefore, the Uacctrl control mode provides the possibility of improving the
voltage stability and minimizing the reduction of bus voltage due to faults. On contrast,
with Qctrl control mode it has the potential risk of getting voltage instability or voltage
collapse during faults if the AC system is weak and no control protection action is taken.
One way to avoid this potential risk is that the control is automatically switched to Uac ctrl
if the AC voltage is detected out of the specified range (Umin~Umax, for instance, 0.9~1.1
per-unit). The other way is that the maximum value for the current order should be
decreased with the AC voltage decreasing during faults. If the current from the VSC is
reduced, its contribution to the short circuit current will also be reduced. Therefore, with
Qctrl control mode the contribution of VSC to the short circuit current is almost neglectable
independent of operation points, or load level. It will then be only interesting to discuss the
Uac ctrl control mode in respect of different operation points.
As it has been discussed, the maximum possible short circuit increment (∆Imax) due to
HVDC Light is determined by the SCR. It will occur if the VSC is operating at zero active
power, namely, it is operating as an SVC or STATCOM. Figure 7 shows the characteristic
of short circuit current contribution versus the load level. The two dashed curves are the
result by taking into account the transformer winding ratio variation due to the tap-
changer.AC networks with SCR equal to 3.14 has been simulated. For different load levels
the observed short circuit currents, during a 3-phase close fault, are marked with black dots
in Figure 7. It should be noted that the short circuit current would be also reduced if the
current order is also limited with the Uac ctrl. The black dot with a circle in Fig. 4 shows
the result when the current order is limited to 35% of the rated current during the AC fault.
If the fault current is evaluated in per unit with the base value equal to the 3-phase fault
current at the corresponding fault location and without HVDC Light connected, it turns out
that the impact of the fault location seems to be insignificant. Under the same load and
operation condition, the 1-ph fault
current is usually smaller than the 3-ph fault current. This is because the average voltage
reduction is smaller for 1-phase fault, thereby the required reactive power generation is
smaller during a 1-phase fault. In addition, the VSC only generates balanced 3-phase
currents, even if the AC bus voltage is
unbalanced due to 1-phase faults. As an example, Figure 8 shows 1-phase and 3-phase fault
currents at different locations (bus B and bus C in Figure 5) under the same operation
condition (SCR=3.14, P=-0.8 and Uac ctrl). Currents in plot (a) and (b) have one base
value, and currents in plot (c)
and (d) have another base value. Plot (b) shows that the peak value is slightly higher than 1,
which means the short circuit current with HVDC Light is slightly higher than that without
the HVDC Light for the same fault. It should be noticed that when a close-in short-circuit
fault
occurs the connected converter station will only feed the fault current. This implies that the
current during the fault in the rest AC lines will be the same as the original AC network
alone. In
other words, the close-in fault isolates the HVDC Light terminal from the AC network. If it
is the circuit breakers in the AC network to be mainly concerned, this type of fault will be
less significant. This is why that the performed studies do not focus on this type of faults.
Figure 8: Different fault currents in per unit Figure 9: AC voltage and fault current with
of the corresponding 3-phase fault current different control strategies.
without HVDC Light.
(a): AC voltage measured at CCP.
(a): 1-ph close fault current. (b): Case 1 – with Uac ctrl and no change
(b): 3-ph close fault current. on current order limit.
(c): 1-ph distant fault current. (c): Case 2 – with Uac ctrl and current order
(d): 3-ph distant fault current. limit depending on voltage.
(d): Case 3 – with Qctrl and current order
limit depending on voltage.
It is seen that the contribution from the HVDC Light makes the difference between the
current of health lines and faulted lines larger, which may have a positive impact in
distinguishing the faulted
and health line. When a short circuit occur in the AC network, the sudden AC bus voltage
variation may result in over current to the converter due to the measurement and control
delay. As soon
as the over current in the converter is detected, the protection will trigger a temporary
blocking of converter.. It is obvious that the transient and steady state current contribution
from the HVDC Light is different. Nevertheless, it should be noted that usually the circuit
breakers do not react to the over current spontaneously, and it often has a delay time of
about 60 ~100 ms. Therefore, it is the steady state current during the fault that should be
considered.
5. CONCLUSION
From detailed analysis it is seen that HVDC system is used for long distance transmission
and its more reliable and best method for power transmission when compared to ac power
transmission.
A comprehensive investigation on the issue regarding the contribution of HVDC Light to
short circuit current has also been performed. The studies lead to the following conclusions;
The
HVDC Light, in contrast to the conventional HVDC which does not contribute any short
circuit current, may contribute some short circuit current. The possible maximum short
circuit
current contribution is determined by the SCR. It is inversely in proportional to the SCR
and it occurs when the transmission system is operating at zero active power. Hence, it is
comparable to the STATCOM as long as the maximum short circuit current contribution is
concerned. The amount of contribution depends on control modes, operation points and
control strategies. With the reactive power control mode, the short circuit current
contribution will
be limited due to the current order limit decreasing with the voltage.
With the AC voltage control mode, the short circuit current contribution will be increased
with the decreasing of active power, if the current order limit is not changed. If the current
order limit is decreasing with voltage, the short circuit current contribution will be small
even if the load level is low. The contribution to the short circuit current is irrelevant to the
fault location if the fault current is evaluated in per unit with the base value equal to the 3-
phase fault current at the corresponding fault location and without HVDC Light connected.
Under the same load and operation condition, the 1-phase fault current is usually smaller
than the 3-phase fault current. Finally, it should be noticed that in associated with higher
short-circuit current the voltage stability and performance is likely to be improved. If the
HVDC Light contributes a higher short-circuit current, the voltage dip due to distant fault is
possibly reduced and thereby the connected electricity consumers may suffer less from
disturbances.
6. REFERENCES
1.) DC Transmission based on voltage source converters, Gunnar Asplund, Kjell Eriksson
and
Kjell Svesson,1997.
2.) The ABCs of HVDC transmission technologies, IEEE Power and Energy
Magazine,2006.
4.) On the Short Circuit Current Contribution of HVDC Light, IEEE , Y. Jiang-Hafner,
M. Hyttinen, and B. Paajarvi.