Transformer Protection
Transformer Protection
6 Transformer
protection
BYB.DAKERS
INTRODUCTION
Types of Fault and Effects
W.V.
WNo\Nb
tERnA& wiu01ti
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LUbllNDW6
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MAIN TRAMSFORMER
- - &LIAltf
FIG. 1. TRANSFORMERFAULTS
104
5UfklES
?iqf=Ji
0
01
0,
K.
FIG.~~.VARIATIONOFFAULTCURRENTONDEL.TAAND
STARSIDESOFTRANSFORMERFORFAULTONSTAR
WINDING.
i\
\\
\
FIG. 2c.
DISTRIBUTION
Star Connection
ts
\\
__
FAULTCURRENTMAGN~TUDE
FOREARTHFAULTON
DELTA
Resistance
AND
WINDING.
Earthing
Earthing Transformer
O'$
0.6
0.8
FIG. 2a.
FAULTCURRENT DISTRIBUTION&
MAGNITUDE
STARPOINT OFA
FOREARTHFAULTNEAR
33KVSOMVATRANSFORMER
That ampere
the windings.
turns balance
is maintained
between
Phase Faults
Solid Earthing
Transformer
The distribution
of fault current for this configuration
is shown in fig. 2a. It is only dependent
on transformer
winding impedance and thus is not directly proportional
to the position of fault. The reactance decreases very
quickly so that fault current is actually highest for a fault
near the neutral point.
Connections
FIG.
3a.
FLOW
OF FAULT
CURRENTS
IN TRANSFORMER
WINDINGS
overcurrent
and earth fault relays. Figures 3a and 3b
show some typical examples. The current values shown
are for transformers
with equal phase voltages on primary and secondary
side. The currents are devised by
106
SOURCE
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qEgrf
I-
SOURCL
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L--
f,
---e---m---
r -_-_-___
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ve
11;
mPl
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+--vTi=
L-_ --_A
FIG.
3b.
FLOW
OF FAULT
CURRENTS
Having a knowledge
of the various connections
and
characteristics
of transformers
in terms of type of fault
and current expected on internal fault to give operation
and external faults to define stability limit, we can proteed to the methods employed to detect faults and the
Reyrolle Protection
range of relays for this purpose.
protective
schemes
applied
WINDINGS.
IN TRANSFORMER
to transfor-
107
quiescent
conditions,
magnetizing
conditions,
normal
load and through fault conditions that current circulates
between the two current transformers
which results in
no current flowing in realys Rl and R2. This is a stability
condition.
If we now consider an earth fault at X shown in fig.
4d it is seen that the balance is disturbed and current
flows in relays Rl and R2. As fault X approaches
Z
the transformer
acts as an auto-transformer
so that 12
increases and Ii decreases. The resultant current is sufficient to operate the relay for all positions of X, and
therefore
the whole of the windings can be protected
using this principle.
When the system is resistance
earthed (fig. 4e) I2
decreases as x approaches
Z. As a result the amount
of winding protected depends upon the relay sensitivity,
i.e. fault setting.
Three-phase
Where
Extending
the foregoing
principle
to three-phase
transformers
the connections
will be as shown in fig. 5.
Since both of these schemes only protect the transformer
on earth faults within the zone covered by the C.T.s; this
scheme of protection
is known as RESTRICTED
EARTH FAULT PROTECTION.
The Reyrolle Protection relay designed for this application
is the type
__
4B3.
-
P2
= +R
*
RI
b
-*
e
FIG. 4.
+ X)
PRINCIPLESOFSEPARATEWINDINGCURRENTBALANCESCHEMES
108
calculation.
The knee point voltage of the C.T.s is
designed to be at least twice this value in order to ensure
high speed operation
of the relay.
This may be necessary when the CT excitation currents and relay current give a primary setting too low in
relation to CT steady state errors.
0.
b.
FIG. 5a.
RESTRICTEDEARTHFAULTPROTECTIONSTARCONNECTED
WINDING.
c.
Fault Setting
at setting
currents
FIG. 6. PRINCIPLEOFMERZ-PRICECIRCULATINGCURRENT
(ORCURRENT-BALANCE)PROTECTIVE
SYSTEM:- USINGHIGHIMPEDENCERELAYS.
voltage
at relay setting
vol-
N = CT ratio.
Type 4B3 Relay
MIN.
FIG. 5b.
RESTRICTEDEARTHFAULTPROTECTIONDELTACONNECTEDWINDING.
FIG. 7.
109
4B3
RELAYCIRCUIT.
-----
PI
P2
FIG. 8.
PRINCIPLEOFOVERALLCURRENTBALANCESCHEMES.
110
(a)
Harmonic Restraint
FIG. 9.
APPLICATION
OFRESTRAINT
BIASTOPOWER-TRANSFORMER
111
PROTECTION.
FIG. 10.
112
--r---r----
9
I
When a power-transformer
is resistance-earthed,
the
current available on an internal earth-fault for operation
of a differential protection may be relatively low and the
percentage of the winding protected against earth-faults
may be inadequate.
This is a fundamental
point and
applies to all differential
protections.
In these circumstances it may be necessary to add some separate form of
earth-fault
protection.
Consider the delta/star-connected
transformer
shown
in fig. 13 in which the star-connected
winding may be
connected
to earth through a resistor. Suppose that a
fault occurs at a point F, p% from the neutral end of the
winding, and that the neutral-earthing
resistor is rated
to pass the full-load current of the star-connected
winding with a terminal fault. If the fault is fed from the delta
side of the transformer
then the current in the primary
winding of the faulty phase is:-
-p.c.M.W.
AL. m-w6AmctMJJf
I H.M.F.
Ok.-ma
I-
rl.tl.F.
I,
T2
100
100
Tl
Full-load
secondary current
Since
Full-load
Secondary current
TI
= __
T2
1
~
v/3
Full-load
primary current
Full-load
primary current
10
FIG. 12.
X!LX
can be combined
with the overall protection
as illustrated in fig. 14. A current transformer
is required, of
course, on the neutral-to-earth
connection.
The advantage of the restricted earth fault relay is that it is energized from a current transformer which sees the whole
of the fault current and not just the primary side equivalent of the fault current. Where the system is solidly
earthed an overall transformer
protection with a setting
of about 30% would give complete phase-to-earth
fault
protection of the delta winding and about 80% of the star
winding. In that case additional
restricted
earth fault
protection is not required for the delta winding, but if it
is fitted to the star winding it may detect faults much
nearer to the neutral end of the winding. On star windings at 132kV and above, it is usual practice to fit
restricted earth fault protection.
In addition to overall protection it is usual practice to
protect all but the smallest transformers
against interturn faults using a Buchholz relay. Severe faults are
detected from the resultant surge in oil and low current
faults by the measurement
of accumulation
of gas produced.
Back-up protection
is normally provided by IDMTL
overcurrent
relays, although in recent years this has
taken the form of a two-stage scheme. This comprises
one IDMTL relay energised from the C.T.s on the H.V.
side, the source of infeed. Operation
of this relay trips
the L.V. breaker and starts a time-delay relay. The setting of this time-delay
relay is such that it does not
operate before the L.V. breaker trips. If the fault persists
the time-delay
relay trips the H.V. breaker.
Since
IDMTL relays have a relatively
long reset time an
instantaneous
overcurrent
relay with a fast reset is connected in series so that the time lag is de-energised
as
soon as the fault is cleared.
Full-load
secondary current
100
Using the given expressions,
the amount of winding
protected
can be plotted graphically against the faultsetting, as shown in fig. 13. This demonstrates
that a
restricted-earth-fault
relay is a much more efficient
device for the detection of winding earth-faults
than a
differential relay; and, in addition, to cover a reasonable
percentage
of the winding, the latter would need to be
extremely
sensitive.
This, however,
is impracticable
because of the limitations
imposed by out-of-balance
current, due to tap-changing,
current-transformer
mismatching, and power-transformer
magnetization.
Although
tests on Duo-bias protection
have shown
that separate
high-set
overcurrent
relays are not
required to ensure tripping under heavy internal fault
conditions,
some customers
still demand them. Care
must be taken in setting high set relays because their
speed of operation
may cause them to have significant
transient overreach.
Some care must also be exercised
in choosing the
current transformer
ratios and connections.
The current
transformer
ratio must compensate
for the difference in
primary and secondary currents of the Transformer
and
their connections
must compensate
for the phase difference. Fig. 14 has illustrated a typical example.
The restricted earth fault relay can be operated from a
completely separate set of line current transformers
or it
FIG. 13.
PROTECTION
AGAINSTEARTH-FAULTS.
114
Clearly,
therefore,
the application
of an overall
scheme must be considered
in relation to the risk of
phase to phase faults.
Considering question 2, this is entirely a matter for the
user to decide in relation to loss of supply and consequently loss of revenue. In the experience
of Reyrolle
Protection
overall schemes are usually applied to all
transformers
of IOMVA and above.
Considering
question
1, overall protection
gives
instantaneous
clearance
of phase faults, has a high
through fault stability whilst retaining a low fault setting
and is inherently discriminative.
Against this the degree
of protection
afforded by IDMTL overcurrent
relays is
very limited since the relay must be set above emergency
loading conditions which often means a setting of 200%
rating. In addition the time setting may have to be high in
order to grade with other overcurrent
relays on the
system.
Auto-Transformer
fb4ER TihnJsFORMEIz
4QM\# IYISlkv Kv! T1sB t: IS%
FIG. 14.
Protection
TYPICALARRANGEMENTOFDIFFERENTIALPROTECTIONWITH
SUPPLEMENTARYEARTH-FAULTPROTECTION.
115
132/2X K$ 120 WA
ALL CT: RATIOS
600/I
n
-Y
-0
FIG. 15.
APPLICATION
OVERALL
70
OF SLMPLE (UNBIASED)
DIFFERENTIAL
2751132 kV.
PROTECTION
AUTO-TRANStORMERS.
116
Directional Overcurrent
Protection
Directional
overcurrent
relays are usually employed to
provide discrimination
on phase faults for two parallel
transformers
where there is no source on the L.V. side.
An analysis of the various fault conditions has shown
that a 90 connection
45 maximum torque relay is the
best arrangement.
Buchholz Relay
This device
is illustrated
FIG. 16.
USE
of two
OF BUCHHOLZ
117
RELAY.
float for a fault well down the winding may be appreciable (of the order of O-5 second). For severe electrical
faults on large transformers,
the Buchholz relay therefore serves as a back-up to other faster forms of protection.
Intertripping
are available,
used.
but we
Fault Throwing
If pilot cables are not available or considered
too
expensive to be used for intertripping
purposes,
then
intertripping
can be achieved by means of fault throwing
switches. This scheme is restricted
to cases where the
fault level is below certain limits.
The transformer
protective
relays first trip the L.V.
circuit-breaker.
This immediately
operates
a fault
throwing switch which is a spring-operated
switch (generally single-phase)
which applies single-phase
to earth
fault to the associated H.V. feeder. Feeder protection at
the remote end then operates
to trip the associated
circuit-breaker.
Schemes
Earth-faults
on the L.V. winding of transformers
which have resistance earthing.
f
Y
0.98:0.578:0.57$:0.
CUT:]
_-_
FIG. 17.
TYPICALGRID-TRANSFORMER
PROTECTIVE
OVERALLDlFFERENTlALPROTECTlONSHOWlNGEFFECTOFEARTH
ON STAR WINDING SIDE.
118
SCHEME
USING
FAULT
119
Type of
Transformer
1. Distribution
Rating ) SMVA
IDMTL
o/c
REF.
2. Distribution
Rating ( SMVA
Overall Differential
REF. each Winding
4C21
4B3
3. Two-Winding
Transmission
Overall Differential
REF. each Winding
IDMTL O/C
SBEF
4C21
4B3
TJMlO
CF3 or
TJM60
4. Gen/Transformer
Overall Differential
REF. each Winding
H.V. IDMTL O/C
L.V. IDMTL O/C
SBEF
4C21
4B3
TJMlO
TJMlO
CF3 or
TJM60
5. Auto
Overall
Current
4B3
General
The degree of protection
provided for any particular
arrangement
depends to a great extent upon the size and
functional importance
of the unit. A further important
factor is economics.
The following table gives a guide to the protection
applied to the various forms of transformers
usually
associated with power system installations:
Reyrolle Protection
have had many years of experience
in the design and application
of relay schemes for the
protection of transformers
and any advice required for a
particular installation
will readily be given.
120
Relay
Type of
Protection
Transformer
On
each
Winding
Circulating
TJMlO
4B3