Surge Impedance and Loading Power
Surge Impedance and Loading Power
Surge Impedance and Loading Power
COM
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Surge Impedance and Loading Power
If a load is purely resistive
equal to the surge impedance
The, Power (3-phase) delivered to
the load:
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Surge Impedance Loading
At SIL,
Receiving End
Voltage is
the same in
magnitude as
Sending End
voltage
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Surge Impedance and Loading Power
Role of Transmission Line
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Hyperbolic Form or the equations
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Hyperbolic Form or the equations
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Hyperbolic Form or the equations
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What if your calculator does not do Hyperbolic?
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Hyperbolic Form or the equations
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Example 5.1
A single-circuit 60-Hz transmission line is 370 km (or
230 mi) long. The conductor’s outside diameter is
0.977in. And the flat horizontal spacing is 7.25 m (or
23.8 ft)between conductors. The resistance of the
conductor is 0.1603 ohm/mile. The load on the line is
125 MW at 215kV with 1 unity power factor. (a) Find the
voltage, current, and power at the sending end. (b)Find
the voltage regulation of the line. (c) Determine the
wavelength and velocity of propagation of the line.
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Example 5.1
A single-circuit 60-Hz transmission line is 370 km (or 230 mi) long. The conductor’s outside
diameter is 0.977in. And the flat horizontal spacing is 7.25 m (or 23.8 ft)between
conductors. The resistance of the conductor is 0.1603 ohm/mile. The load on the line is 125
MW at 215kV with 1 unity power factor. (a) Find the voltage, current, and power at the
sending end. (b)Find the voltage regulation of the line. (c) Determine the wavelength and
velocity of propagation of the line.
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Example 5.1
A single-circuit 60-Hz transmission line is 370 km (or 230 mi) long. The conductor’s outside
diameter is 0.977in. And the flat horizontal spacing is 7.25 m (or 23.8 ft)between
conductors. The resistance of the conductor is 0.1603 ohm/mile. The load on the line is 125
MW at 215kV with 1 unity power factor. (a) Find the voltage, current, and power at the
sending end. (b)Find the voltage regulation of the line. (c) Determine the wavelength and
velocity of propagation of the line.
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Example 5.1
A single-circuit 60-Hz transmission line is 370 km (or 230 mi) long. The conductor’s outside
diameter is 0.977in. And the flat horizontal spacing is 7.25 m (or 23.8 ft)between
conductors. The resistance of the conductor is 0.1603 ohm/mile. The load on the line is 125
MW at 215kV with 1 unity power factor. (a) Find the voltage, current, and power at the
sending end. (b)Find the voltage regulation of the line. (c) Determine the wavelength and
velocity of propagation of the line.
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Example 5.1
A single-circuit 60-Hz transmission line is 370 km (or 230 mi) long. The conductor’s outside
diameter is 0.977in. And the flat horizontal spacing is 7.25 m (or 23.8 ft)between
conductors. The resistance of the conductor is 0.1603 ohm/mile. The load on the line is 125
MW at 215kV with 1 unity power factor. (a) Find the voltage, current, and power at the
sending end. (b)Find the voltage regulation of the line. (c) Determine the wavelength and
velocity of propagation of the line.
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Example 5.1
A single-circuit 60-Hz transmission line is 370 km (or 230 mi) long. The conductor’s outside
diameter is 0.977in. And the flat horizontal spacing is 7.25 m (or 23.8 ft)between
conductors. The resistance of the conductor is 0.1603 ohm/mile. The load on the line is 125
MW at 215kV with 1 unity power factor. (a) Find the voltage, current, and power at the
sending end. (b)Find the voltage regulation of the line. (c) Determine the wavelength and
velocity of propagation of the line.
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Example 5.1
A single-circuit 60-Hz
transmission line is 370
km (or 230 mi) long. The
conductor’s outside
diameter is 0.977in. And
the flat horizontal
spacing is 7.25 m (or
23.8 ft)between
conductors. The
resistance of the
conductor is 0.1603
ohm/mile. The load on
the line is 125 MW at
215kV with 1 unity power
factor. (a) Find the
voltage, current, and
power at the sending end.
(b)Find the voltage
regulation of the line.
(c) Determine the
wavelength and velocity
of propagation of the
line.
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Class Activity
Class Activity on Transmission Parameters
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What if your calculator does not do Hyperbolic?
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Equivalent Circuit of a Long Line
Can we use Pi-circuit even for a long line?
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Equivalent Circuit of a Long Line
Can we use Pi-circuit even for a long line?
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Equivalent Circuit of a Long Line
Can we use Pi-circuit even for a long line?
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Equivalent Circuit of a Long Line
Can we use Pi-circuit even for a long line?
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Nominal to long-line
From Nominal Pi-ckt equation ( 50 < l < 150 )
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Example 5.3
Find the equivalent pi-circuit for the line described
in Example 5.1 and compare it with the nominal pi.
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Example 5.3
Find the equivalent pi-circuit for the line described
in Example 5.1 and compare it with the nominal pi.
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Power Flow
Power Flow (P & Q)
Expressed by V, I, and pf
Expressed by ABCD circuit constants
⌧Focus: How VR and IR affects VS
⌧ABCD Constants: All Complex Numbers
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Power Flow
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Power Flow
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Power Flow: Origin Shift
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Power Flow: Origin Shift
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Power Flow
Observations
Point n is not dependent
on IR
Point n will not change if
VR is constant: (A*VR^2)/B
Distance between n and k
is constant for fixed value
of VS and VR: (VS*VR)/B
Distance between o and k
changes with changing load
(IR)
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Power Flow
Observations
Because the distance
between n and k is
constant, the distance
between o and k is
constrained to move in a
circle whose center is at
n.
If VR is held constant, a
different circle can be
drawn for different values
of VS’s 76
Power Flow for Max Power
If VR is held constant, a different circle can be drawn for
different values of VS’s
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Power Flow for Max Power
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Power Flow: Impact of Vs and Var
When PR has to be
maintained, moving
from a to b involves:
Sending end voltage
reduces from VS4 to VS3
(To keep the VR
intact), due to the VS
decrease, the Var has
to be decreased, which
means negative reactive
power must be supplied
by parallel capacitors
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Reactive Compensation of Transmission Line
Reactive Compensation by:
Series Compensation: Capacitor
placed in each conductor reduces
the series impedance
Shunt Compensation: Placement of
inductors between conductor and
neutral reduces the susceptance
(admittance)
Pi-Circuit Case
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Reactive Compensation of Transmission Line
Pi-Circuit Case
Maximum Power Equation
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Reactive
Compensation
of
Transmission
Line
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EXAMPLE 5.4: Reactive Compensation of Transmission Line
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EXAMPLE 5.4: Reactive Compensation of Transmission Line
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EXAMPLE 5.4: Reactive Compensation of Transmission Line
In order to show the relative changes in the B constant with respect to the change of the A,
C, and D constants of a line when series compensation is applied, find the constants for the
line of Example 5.1 uncompensated and for a series compensation factor of 70%
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EXAMPLE 5.4: Reactive Compensation of Transmission Line
In order to show the relative changes in the B constant with respect to the change of the A,
C, and D constants of a line when series compensation is applied, find the constants for the
line of Example 5.1 uncompensated and for a series compensation factor of 70%
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EXAMPLE 5.4: Reactive Compensation of Transmission Line
In order to show the relative changes in the B constant with respect to the change of the A,
C, and D constants of a line when series compensation is applied, find the constants for the
line of Example 5.1 uncompensated and for a series compensation factor of 70%
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Shunt Compensation
Charging Current Reduction with Shunt Compensation
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