Submitted by Utkarsh Saxena Roll No-11EIEEE061 Electrical Engg
Submitted by Utkarsh Saxena Roll No-11EIEEE061 Electrical Engg
Submitted by Utkarsh Saxena Roll No-11EIEEE061 Electrical Engg
Submitted By
Utkarsh Saxena
Roll No-11EIEEE061
Electrical Engg.
Contents
Introduction
Operating mechanism
Types of circuit breakers
Air Blast circuit breaker
Vacuum circuit breaker
Oil circuit breaker
SF6 circuit breaker
Conclusion
Introduction
A circuit breaker is a mechanical switching
device, capable of making, carrying and
breaking currents under normal circuit
conditions. It is also capable of making and
carrying currents for a specified time and
breaking currents under specified
abnormal circuit conditions, such as those
of a short circuit.
Fixed Fixed
contact contact
ARC ARC ISARC
QUENCHED BY
MEDIUM
Moving Moving
contact
contact
OPERATING
PRINCIPLE
OF BREAKER IN A CIRCUIT BREAKER
Operating Mechanism
Circuit Breaker consists of two contacts:
Fixed contact.
Moving contact.
Moving contact is used to make and break the circuit
using stored energies in the form of spring or
compressed air.
Spring, pneumatic or oil damping is used to arrest the
speed of mc while closing.
FC contains a spring which holds the mc after closing.
Circuit breaker consists of two coils:
Closing coil –Used to close the circuit.
Tripping coil-Used to trip the circuit.
These coils activate the stored energy and
directs the mc to open or close.
DC batteries are used to energize these coils.
Solenoids are used to close or trip it.
CBs are usually arranged with pilot devices to
sense a fault current and to operate the trip
opening mechanism.
The Electric Arc
During the separation of contacts, due to large
fault current and high current density at the
contact region the surrounding medium ionizes
and thus a conducting medium is formed. This is
called the ARC.
Disadvantages:
Slower operation , takes about 20 cycles for arc
quenching.
It is highly inflammable , so high risk of fire.
High maintenance cost.
VACCUM CIRCUIT BREAKER
It is designed for medium voltage
range (3.3-33kv).
This consists of vacuum of pressure
(1*10-6) inside arc extinction chamber.
The arc burns in metal vapour when
the contacts are disconnected.
At high voltage , it’s rate of dielectric
strength recovery is very high.
Due to vacuum arc extinction is very
fast.
The contacts loose metals gradually
due to formation of metal vapours.
Advantages:
Free from arc and fire hazards.
Low cost for maintenance & simpler mechanism.
Low arcing time & high contact life.
Silent and less vibrational operation.
Due to vacuum contacts remain free from corrosion.
No byproducts formed.
Disadvantages:
High initial cost due to creation of vacuum.
Surface of contacts are depleted due to metal vapours.
High cost & size required for high voltage breakers.
AIR BLAST CIRCUIT BREAKERS
This operates using high velocity blast of air which
quenches the arc.
It consists of blast valve , blast tube & contacts.
Blast valve contains air at high pressure.
Blast tube carries the air at high pressure & opens the
moving contact attached to spring.
There is no carbonization of surface as in VCB.
Air should be kept clean & dry to operate it properly.
Advantages:
High speed operation as compared to OCB.
Ability to withstand frequent switching.
Facility for high speed reclosure.
Less maintenance as compared to OCB.
Disadvantages:
Little moisture content prolongs arcing time.
Pressure should be checked frequently for frequent
operation.
Risk of fire hazards due to over voltages.
It can’t be used for high voltage operation due to
prolonged arc quenching.
SF6 CIRCUIT BREAKERS
It contains an arc interruption chamber containing SF6 gas.
In closed position the contacts remain surrounded
by SF6 gas at a pressure of 2.8 kg/cm2 .
During opening high pressure SF6 gas at 14 kg/cm2 from its
reservoir flows towards the chamber by valve mechanism.
SF6 rapidly absorbs the free electrons in the arc path to
form immobile negative ions to build up high dielectric
strength.
It also cools the arc and extinguishes it.
After operation the valve is closed by the action of a set of
springs.
Absorbent materials are used to absorb the byproducts and
moisture.
Advantages:
Very short arcing period due to superior arc quenching
property of SF6 .
Can interrupt much larger currents as compared to other
breakers.
No risk of fire.
Low maintenance, light foundation.
No over voltage problem.
There are no carbon deposits.
Disadvantages:
SF6 breakers are costly due to high cost of SF6.
SF6 gas has to be reconditioned after every operation of the
breaker, additional equipment is required for this purpose.
CONCLUSION:
Therefore, we conclude that circuit breaker is
the most essential part of the electrical
networks as it protects every device from
damage. It helps us to detect the fault and area
affected by it. Nowadays vacuum and SF6
circuit breakers are widely used due to their
reliable and fast operations.