Forget your password?
Fields marked with an asterisk (*) are mandatory
As customers increasingly push to adopt condition-based maintenance for Gas-Insulated Substations (GIS), new opportunities are arising for periodic or permanent measurement of partial discharge.
Traditionally, high voltage substations are air insulated. But the clearances required between phases and between phases and earth are huge. This results in rather large installations, making them difficult to house in urban environments where space is at a premium. To overcome this constraint, a parallel technology was developed, the Gas-Insulated Substation (GIS), using a gas, for example sulphur hexafluoride (SF6), at high pressure. SF6 has excellent dielectric properties and is used as the insulating medium between the phases and between the phases and earth. As a consequence, a GIS is much more compact. In fact, gas-insulated substations can be down to one-tenth the size of their air-insulated cousins, depending on the voltage level.
The use of gas insulation in the power system network has developed rapidly thanks to its compact nature, low maintenance requirement and reliable operation. But the reliability of the GIS equipment can be undermined by the presence of free particles that originate mainly from the mechanical vibrations, from moving parts in the system such as breakers or disconnectors, or even from the manufacturing process.
According to David Gautschi, Alstom Grid electrical engineer, “they are rare, but can locally generate high electric fields exceeding the structure’s design limits and initiate partial discharges (PD) forming free electrons and ions in the insulation. Repeated partial discharges are capable of triggering a progressive carbonisation of spacers that can slowly build up over years until they produce a flashover, or failure of the switchgear insulation structure resulting in the entire installation, or parts of it, being shut down.” Repairs – often involving the manufacture of specific parts – can take several weeks to complete.
When partial discharges occur (resulting in voltage drops of less than a nanosecond), they generate electromagnetic waves that propagate through the switchgear. These waves can be measured by means of different technologies operating in a variety of frequency ranges. Detecting partial discharges in lower frequency ranges can be carried out by taking measurements with acoustic sensors. Says Gautschi, "In the medium frequency range, between a few kHz and a few MHz, measurements are usually made by means of a coupling capacitor. The disadvantage of using this device is that it is large and not suitable for online monitoring. However, partial discharges in pressurised gas can be measured in the Ultra High Frequency (UHF) range between 100 MHz and 2 GHz. The added advantage here is that this allows the whole substation to be permanently monitored and the location of PD activity can also be pinpointed.” Demand for this level of monitoring is particularly high in the Middle East, though less pronounced in Europe, where utilities are more hesitant to make the additional outlay required.
The frequency range can be chosen to measure in a band with low external noise. The suppression of external noises, for example in the GSM mobile phone range, can be achieved in the following way: the measurements made by the sensors fitted in the GIS are compared with the results of those installed in other compartments or those of an additional external antenna. This method avoids using additional band stop filters on the input ports, as generally required by standard wide band monitoring systems. It also maintains a good signal level. Once the partial discharge activity has been measured, the next task – and the more complicated one – is to interpret the partial discharge patterns and classify them into degrees of severity.
The new sensor has been fitted in all types of Alstom Grid gas-insulated substation and tested for use in retrofit projects. These latest developments have resulted in an adapted version of the sensor being used in large power transformers to monitor partial discharges in oil. This version has been installed in 800 MVA transformer poles of the Swiss utility Alpiq. The transformers have been in service since 2011.
During the development of the sensor, the existing calibration methods for GIS sensors were tested, and a new high performance calibration cell has been developed to carry out tests when no bays are available to carry out this procedure in situ.
Forgot your password? Click here
Don't have an account? Sign up
Fields marked with an asterisk (*) are mandatory