Introduction To Power Systems (Eceg-3176) : Addis Ababa University Addis Ababa Institute of Technology (Aait)
Introduction To Power Systems (Eceg-3176) : Addis Ababa University Addis Ababa Institute of Technology (Aait)
Systems(ECEG-3176)
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Conductors
The conductors are usually made of aluminum or its
alloys. Aluminum is preferred over copper as an
aluminum conductor is lighter in weight and cheaper
in cost than copper conductor of the same resistance.
The conductors are not straight wires but strands of
wire twisted together to form a single conductor to
give it higher tensile strength. One of the most
common conductors is aluminum conductor, steel
reinforced (ACSR).
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● EHV lines often have more than one conductor per
phase.
● These conductors are called a bundle.
● Bundle conductors have a lower electric field
strength at the conductor surfaces, thereby
controlling corona.
● They also have a smaller series reactance.
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Insulators
● Towers are at ground potential, the lines must be
insulated from the tower structure.
● An insulator is a device intended to give flexible or
rigid support to the conductors or equipment and to
insulate these conductors or equipment from
ground.
●
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Support structures
Transmission lines employ a variety of support
structures.
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Shield wires
● Shield wire located above conductors protect the
conductors from lightening.
● These are usually high- or extra-high strength steel,
Alumo-weld , or ACSR with much smaller cross
section than the phase conductors.
● Shield wires are grounded to the tower.
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Electrical factors
● Conductors:
size, type, number of bundle per phase
Thermal capacity: normal, emergency, overload, short
circuit currents
● Insulators:
No. of insulator discs
Arrangement of strings: vertical or V-shaped
Clearance: phase to phase, phase to tower.
● Shield wires: no., type and location of shield wires,
footing resistance of towers,…
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Mechanical Factors
● Mechanical design focuses on strength of the conductors
, insulator strings and support structures.
● Conductors must be strong enough to support a
specified thickness of ice and a specified wind in
addition to their own weight.
● Suspension insulator strings must be strong enough to
support the phase conductors with ice and wind
loadings from tower to tower (span length).
● Towers support phase conductors, shield wires with ice
and wind loadings.
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Environmental factors
● Environmental factors includes land usage and visual
impact.
● When a line route is selected, the impact on local
communities and population centers, land values,
access to property, wild life and use of public parks ,…,
must all be considered.
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Economic Factors
The optimum line design meets all the technical design
criteria at lowest possible overall cost, which includes the
total installed cost of the line as well as the cost of line
losses over the operating life of the line.
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Transmission Line Parameters
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Line Resistance
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● It is very well known that the dc resistance of a
wire is given by
● where ρ is the resistivity of the wire in Ω - m, l is
the length in meter and A is the cross sectional area
in m2 .
● Unfortunately the resistance of an overhead
conductor is not the same as that given by the
above expression.
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● When alternating current flows through a
conductor, the current density is not uniform over
the entire cross section but is somewhat higher at
the surface.
● This is called the skin effect and this makes the ac
resistance a little more than the dc resistance.
● Moreover in a stranded conductor, the length of
each strand is more than the length of the
composite conductor.
● This also increases the value of the dc resistance.
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● Finally the temperature also affects the resistivity
of conductors.
● However, the temperature rise in metallic
conductors is almost linear in the practical range
of operation and is given by
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Inductance
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A. Internal Inductance
Consider a straight round (cylindrical) conductor, the
cross-section of which is shown below.
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Where
µ0 is the permeability of the free space and is given by 4π X
10-7 H/m.
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Integrating over the range of x , i.e., from zero to
r , we get the internal flux linkage as
B. External Inductance
Let us consider an isolated straight conductor as shown
below.
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Where
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Inductance of a Single-Phase Two-Wire Line
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−7 𝐷
𝐿1=2 × 10 𝑙𝑛 ′
𝑟1
The inductance of the circuit due to current in conductor 2 only
−7 𝐷
𝐿2=2 × 10 𝑙𝑛 ′
𝑟2
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the circuit)
−7 𝐷
𝐿= 𝐿1+ 𝐿2= 4 × 10 𝑙𝑛 ′ ′
𝐻 /𝑚
√𝑟 1 𝑟2
If
−7 𝐷
𝐿= 4 × 10 𝑙𝑛
𝑟′
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Flux Linkage of One Conductor in a Group
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𝑛
𝐼 1 + 𝐼 2+ …+ 𝐼 𝑛=∑ 𝐼 𝑗=0
𝑗=1
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Where is the distance of ith conductor from jth conductor
carrying current
The total flux linkages of conductor i due to flux up to point P are
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Inductance of Composite Conductor Lines
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All the strands are identical and share the current equally. Thus,
each filament of A is taken to carry a current I/n, while each
filament of conductor B carries the return current of -I/m.
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Flux linkages of filament i in conductor A.
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The inductance of the composite conductor B is determined in a
similar manner, and the total inductance of the line is
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Inductance of Three Phase Lines with
Equilateral Spacing
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Balanced three phase currents.
Three-phase three-wire line consisting of three solid cylindrical
conductors a, b, c, each with radius r, and with equal phase
spacing D between any two conductors.
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● To determine inductance, assume balanced positive-sequence
currents
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calculation of bundle GMR with
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bundle spacing is given by
For a two bundle conductor
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Inductance of Three Phase Double
Circuit Lines
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Transposed double circuit line.
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The method of GMD can be used to find the
inductance per phase.
To do this, the identical phases are grouped
together.
The GMD between each phase group:
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The equivalent GMR for calculating the per phase inductance is:
or
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Capacitance
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Assumptions:
1. The line is sufficiently long that end effects are
neglected.
2. It is a perfect conductor (zero resistivity).
3. Uniform distribution of charge on the surface. The
uniformly distributed charge on the wire is
equivalent to a charge concentrated at the center
of the wire for calculating flux external to the wire
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Capacitance of single phase two wire line
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ra rb
.
a b
D
V
V
F/m line to line
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If the two-wire line is supplied by a transformer with a grounded center tap,
then the voltage between each conductor and ground is half the potential
difference between the conductors and therefore
the line to neutral capacitance for conductor a becomes
where ra=rb=r
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Capacitance of a Three-phase Line with
Equilateral Spacing
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𝑞 𝑎 +𝑞 𝑏 +𝑞 𝑐 =0
V
V
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.
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Or
Due to symmetry:
The line associated line charging current
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Capacitance of a Three-phase Line with
Unsymmetrical Spacing
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The average vab is: 78
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Since,
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Effect of Bundling
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Capacitance of Three Phase
Double Circuit Line
Each phase conductor is transposed within the groups
The expression for GMD is the same as was found for inductance
calculation.
The GMRC of each phase group is Similar to the GMRL, with the exception that
r is used instead of conductors GMR
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Proximity Effect
In the transmission lines, there are (one or two) current carrying
conductors placed nearby and their magnetic flux links with the conductor
under consideration.
The flux set up by the nearby current carrying conductor affects the
distribution of current in the conductor. This effect is called proximity
effect.