Optical Transducers AREVA Think Grid
Optical Transducers AREVA Think Grid
Optical Transducers AREVA Think Grid
CHApTer II
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HV substation
Control room
Instrument transformer
Current transducer
Physical sensor
There is growing interest worldwide in High Voltage Direct Current (HVDC) electric power transmission. The main reasons are lower losses than in AC transmission (they are unaffected by eddy current) and the fact that most renewable power resources e.g. hydroelectric, wind power, solar lie far from energy endusers. HVDC networks are also more costeffective because they can transport a large amount of electrical power over long distances without intermediate substations. Additional factors driving the use of HVDC are the rise in bulk electricity trading and the flexible coupling of networks to control load flows and reduce network failures. Central to all these factors is measurement to optimise the control of thyristors in
Main Feature
CHApTer II
between the busbar and the ground. It responds at temperatures between 60C and minus 40C with a scale factor error less than 0.1%, and boasts a frequency bandwidth of DC to 5 kHz. Other technologies, though powerful, had inherent limitations. Voltage insulation restricts the use of zero flux sensors to 500 kV, while resistance shunt technology does not measure harmonics accurately enough. The optical current transducer has emerged as the right solution: simple, rugged, and very, very accurate. The most effective development on the optical theme is a system that combines a Faraday sensor with a shunt sensor to supply the benchmark readings. Its an interesting avenue to explore, says Monfils. The Faraday sensor is the only one that has such a flat bandwidth from DC to 5 kHz with no phase shift. It makes full use of the shunts high temperature stability.
Alstom Grid's mixed optical technology based on DC shunt and ring-glass sensors.
enlightening measures
The optical current transducer Alstoms team has developed uses a Faraday optical sensor a piece of ring-shaped glass mounted on the primary conductor. In this way it forms an optical circuit round the conductor carrying the current it is measuring. A beam of light produces a polarised optical wave that enters the ring. The properties of glass are such that it produces a Faraday effect shifting the polarisation angle according to the current under measurement. Optical signals are processed by the digital primary converter to current signals and transmitted digitally through the optical fibre links to the CVCOM 4DC merging unit. The CVCOM 4DC merges the digital signals from different current transducers for trans26
enable monitoring of a wide range of critical conditions, such as overvoltage, DC current imbalance, thermal overland, unexpected breaker movement. Among the advantages of the optical sensor are its very wide frequency band up to 5 kHz and simple optical fibre data links that make it slimmer and shorter than conventional transducers. It is impervious to electromagnetic radiation and perturbations. The signal transmission link insulation uses no insulating fluid, which rules out leakage and explosions. The digital transmission of the measured data complies with IEC standard 61850-9-2, an Ethernet-based protocol that allows devices in a substation to communicate with
M o r e
Pierre-Andr Monfils
Monfils. Accurate ripple measurement is challenging because it requires a very wide frequency bandwidth. Our optical current sensor can measure accurately up to 5 kHz compared to the 50 Hz range of the classic transducer. Ripple measurement is critical because it tells the controller how thyristors are operating. The 12-pulse thyristors in the 800 kV HVDC system are designed to reduce harmonics, which can lead to overheating, resonance problems, interference with ICT resources, and even affect control systems. Our transducers ripple measurement gives the control system a high-precision image of the thyristors, says Monfils. It can then fine-tune them or change control mode accordingly. It is with similar image imagery that Monfils describes the overall purpose of the optical current transducer: Essentially it provides the controller with a perfect digital image of the currents measured value. We have achieved very high-precision accuracy of 0.1% of rated current each other. The result? It can be used as part of an open and versatile communications network for substation automation. Chinese operators, for example, would never purchase a complete control system, says Monfils. But with its open-ended electronics, our transducer could fit and interface with their systems.
testing tiMes
A prime function of transducers is to transmit voltage insulation readings to the controller. To ensure that the information is transmitted safely, transducers have to demonstrate their own dielectric strength i.e. that their insulation can withstand the highest operating voltage without breakdown. To that end they undergo a range of demanding withstand tests to ensure their dielectric strength meets requirements. An important dielectric test parameter is rated insulation voltage, which must always be higher than the operating voltage, including any kind of overvoltage. Withstand tests were conducted successfully at the high-voltage test laboratory in Graz, Austria. Dielectric strength tests include: Lightning impulse withstand tests Wet switching impulse withstand tests DC wet withstand tests AC withstand tests AC withstand tests with partial discharge measurement DC withstand tests with partial discharge measurement DC polarity reversal tests Radio interference voltage tests on AC and DC equipment.
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