HVDC Valvesppt ABB
HVDC Valvesppt ABB
HVDC Valvesppt ABB
Basic Requirement: 1.shall be able to carry current only in forward direction. 2. Non conducting valve shall be able to sustain a forward and reverse blocking voltage. The valve is designed for a max blocking voltage about three times the rated direct voltage of the 6-pulse converter bridge.
HVDC Valves
3. transition from the blocking condition to the conducting condition takes place when the valve is given a control pulse(firing pulse)It remains in the conducting state until the current through the valve is reduced to zero. 4. the valve is also designed for over current condition .the maximum over current occurs for a direct short circuit across a valve an the amplitude is mainly determined by the reactance of the converter transformer. In addition it should have; High reliability Low losses Minimum installation and maintenance costs.
HVDC Converter
HVDC converter normally built with two 6-pulse converter bridges in cascade. Transformers feeding 6-p bridges are star-star and star-delta (YY and YD) respectively ,introducing a phase shift of 30o between two bridges. a12-pulse converter with thyristor valves is normally built with three physical units , quadruple valves, Quadruple valve is air insulated and water cooled Each single valve is protected with a valve arrester which is mounted on one side of the quadruple valve.
The Thyristor
v v v v
Hvdc valves
Ref power semiconductor devices and circuits edited by Andre A Jacklin
The AC/Dc converter is subjected to very high voltages and each valve in the converter bridge must be able to withstand several hundred kV. The line current is normally in the range of 1000 to 4000 A. The modern HVDC valves are based on thyristors. The voltage capability of the single thyristors is limited to less than 10 kV and a large number of thyristors must therefore be connected in series to support this voltage. The thyristor string is often organized in thyristor modules with current limiting inductors in between.
Most thyristors are located at a high electric potential, making certain demands on the valve designs. The necessary means for firing and protection of thyristors must be energized by valve current at each particular thyristor level. Triggering signals between the firing and protection means and controls system at ground potential must be transmitted optically.
The LTT should be self protected against voltage triggering i.e. 1. the thyristor must not be damaged by spurious triggering due to an excessively high off state voltage (leakage current), 2. excessively fast dVo/dt ( displacement current) or 3. an unintended forward blocking voltage during the reverse recovery period (stored charge)
Valve firing
current voltage
Optical indicating pulse is generated at each thyristor level as soon as the anode cathode voltage across the thyristor has reached an appropriate level for safe turn on. When the converter control system generates the control (CP) the valve control system will send optical firing pulses to all thyristor levels of the string.
Triggering of ETT
In ETT (Electrically triggered thyristor) case FP triggers the TCU (Thyristor control unit) to release gate pulse from a precharged capacitor.
R R
FP
TCU IP
ETT
ETT Triggering
FP triggers the LTT (light Triggered Thyristor) And supplies gate pulse to ETT R LTT
FP
ETT IP TCU C
LTT Triggering
A new 45 cm 2 7 kV self protected LTT was developed in 1987. For short turnon delay a high optical power ( > 30 mw, =940 nm) results in td ,< 4 s. A R FP LTT IP TCU C R
One LD (Laser diode) per two LTT carrying 1.5 A supplying 70 mw for 100 s
FP
IP
CP FP t
IP
IP
CP FP t