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Fault Location EE 526 Venkat Mynam Senior Research Engineer Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories
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Accurate Fault Location is Critical
Expedite Service Restoration Reduce outage times Identify insulator problems Prevent potential recurring faults Verify Protective Relay Performance
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Permanent Fault Need Immediate Attention
We need accurate fault location
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Temporary Faults Needs Attention Too
Identify & Fix Damaged Insulators-Minimize Fault Recurrence
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Hard to Find a Flashed Insulator
Fault location investigations
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Finding Faults
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Visual Methods
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Estimate Location From Current
“JM Drop” circa 1936 Approximate fault location was calculated based on system and line parameters
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Methods in Use Line impedance Based Traveling Wave Based
Measure impedance to fault Compare it to the actual line impedance Traveling Wave Based Measure wave arrival time
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System One-Line and Circuit Representation of System Fault
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Modified Takagi Method-Single Ended (Negative Sequence)
Multiply by I2 and save Imaginary part Zero For: Rf=0 or system is homogeneous
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IEEE Guide Defines Homogeneous System
“A transmission system where the local and remote source impedances have the same angle as the line impedance”
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Single End Impedance Method
Accuracy of zero-sequence line impedance Effect of zero-sequence mutual coupling from parallel lines Time synchronization Communication Radial topology Fault resistance System nonhomogeneity Accuracy of measurements Accuracy of positive-sequence line impedance
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SE Impedance Fault Location Phase-Ground Faults
𝑚𝐴𝐺= 𝐼𝑚 𝑉𝐴𝐺∙ 𝐼 2 𝑎 ∗ 𝐼𝑚 𝑍1𝐿∙ 𝐼𝐴𝐺+𝑘0∙𝐼𝐺 ∙ 𝐼 2 𝑎 ∗ 𝑚𝐵𝐺= 𝐼𝑚(𝑉𝐵𝐺∙ 𝐼 2 𝑏 ∗ ) 𝐼𝑚(𝑍1𝐿∙(𝐼𝐵𝐺+𝑘0∙𝐼𝐺)∙ 𝐼 2 𝑏 ∗ ) 𝑚𝐶𝐺= 𝐼𝑚 𝑉𝐶𝐺∙ 𝐼 2 𝑐 ∗ 𝐼𝑚 𝑍1𝐿∙ 𝐼𝐶𝐺+𝑘0∙𝐼𝐺 ∙ 𝐼 2 𝑐 ∗ 𝐼 2 𝑏 =𝑎∙𝐼 2 𝑎 𝐼 2 𝑐 = 𝑎 2 ∙𝐼 2 𝑎
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SE Impedance Fault Location Multi-Phase Faults
𝑚𝐴𝐵= 𝐼𝑚 𝑉𝐴𝐵∙ 𝑗∙𝐼 2 𝑐 ∗ 𝐼𝑚 𝑍1𝐿∙𝐼𝐵𝐶∙ 𝑗∙𝐼 2 𝑐 ∗ 𝑚𝐵𝐶= 𝐼𝑚 𝑉𝐵𝐶∙ (𝑗∙𝐼 2 𝑎 ) ∗ 𝐼𝑚 𝑍1𝐿∙𝐼𝐵𝐶∙ (𝑗∙𝐼 2 𝑎 ) ∗ 𝑚𝐶𝐴= 𝐼𝑚 𝑉𝐶𝐴∙ (𝑗∙𝐼 2 𝑏 ) ∗ 𝐼𝑚 𝑍1𝐿∙𝐼𝐶𝐴∙ (𝑗∙𝐼 2 𝑏 ) ∗ 𝑚3𝑃= 𝐼𝑚 𝑉∅∅∙ 𝐼∅∅ ∗ 𝐼𝑚 𝑍1𝐿∙𝐼∅∅∙ 𝐼∅∅ ∗ 𝐼 2 𝑏 =𝑎∙𝐼 2 𝑎 𝐼 2 𝑐 = 𝑎 2 ∙𝐼 2 𝑎
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Fault Loop Selection and Reporting
Select appropriate Fault Loop Report a single fault location value Select a window of data from the fault data Provide the average value of fault location computed from the selected window
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Modified Takagi Method-Multi Ended (Using Remote terminal current)
Multiply by I2 and save Imaginary part THIS IS ZERO
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Multi-End I2 Total Current
Fault resistance System nonhomogeneity Accuracy of measurements Accuracy of positive-sequence line impedance Accuracy of zero-sequence line impedance Effect of zero-sequence mutual coupling from parallel lines Time synchronization Communication
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ME_I Impedance Fault Location Phase-Ground Faults
𝑚𝐴𝐺= 𝐼𝑚 𝑉𝐴𝐺∙ 𝐼 2𝑇 𝑎 ∗ 𝐼𝑚 𝑍1𝐿∙ 𝐼𝐴𝐺+𝑘0∙𝐼𝐺 ∙ 𝐼 2𝑇 𝑎 ∗ 𝑚𝐵𝐺= 𝐼𝑚(𝑉𝐵𝐺∙ 𝐼 2𝑇 𝑏 ∗ ) 𝐼𝑚(𝑍1𝐿∙(𝐼𝐵𝐺+𝑘0∙𝐼𝐺)∙ 𝐼 2𝑇 𝑏 ∗ ) 𝑚𝐶𝐺= 𝐼𝑚 𝑉𝐶𝐺∙ 𝐼 2𝑇 𝑐 ∗ 𝐼𝑚 𝑍1𝐿∙ 𝐼𝐶𝐺+𝑘0∙𝐼𝐺 ∙ 𝐼 2𝑇 𝑐 ∗ 𝐼 2𝑇 𝑏 =𝑎∙𝐼 2𝑇 𝑎 𝐼 2𝑇 𝑐 = 𝑎 2 ∙𝐼 2𝑇 𝑎 𝐼2𝑇=𝐼2𝐿𝑜𝑐𝑎𝑙+𝐼2𝑅𝑒𝑚𝑜𝑡𝑒
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ME Impedance Fault Location Multi-Phase Faults
𝑚𝐴𝐵= 𝐼𝑚 𝑉𝐴𝐵∙ 𝑗∙𝐼 2𝑇 𝑐 ∗ 𝐼𝑚 𝑍1𝐿∙𝐼𝐵𝐶∙ 𝑗∙𝐼 2𝑇 𝑐 ∗ 𝑚𝐵𝐶= 𝐼𝑚 𝑉𝐵𝐶∙ (𝑗∙𝐼 2𝑇 𝑎 ) ∗ 𝐼𝑚 𝑍1𝐿∙𝐼𝐵𝐶∙ (𝑗∙𝐼 2𝑇 𝑎 ) ∗ 𝑚𝐶𝐴= 𝐼𝑚 𝑉𝐶𝐴∙ (𝑗∙𝐼 2𝑇 𝑏 ) ∗ 𝐼𝑚 𝑍1𝐿∙𝐼𝐶𝐴∙ (𝑗∙𝐼 2𝑇 𝑏 ) ∗ 𝑚3𝑃= 𝐼𝑚 𝑉∅∅∙ 𝐼∅∅𝑇 ∗ 𝐼𝑚 𝑍1𝐿∙𝐼∅∅∙ 𝐼∅∅𝑇 ∗ 𝐼 2𝑇 𝑏 =𝑎∙𝐼 2𝑇 𝑎 𝐼 2𝑇 𝑐 = 𝑎 2 ∙𝐼 2𝑇 𝑎 𝐼2𝑇=𝐼2𝐿𝑜𝑐𝑎𝑙+𝐼2𝑅𝑒𝑚𝑜𝑡𝑒 𝐼∅∅𝑇 =𝐼∅∅𝐿𝑜𝑐𝑎𝑙+𝐼∅∅𝑅𝑒𝑚𝑜𝑡𝑒
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Multi Ended Negative Sequence Using Remote terminal voltage and current
ref V2F +
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Use Synchronized Measurements to Calculate Voltage at Fault Point
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Double End With V2 and I2
Fault resistance System nonhomogeneity Accuracy of measurements Accuracy of positive-sequence line impedance Accuracy of zero-sequence line impedance Effect of zero-sequence mutual coupling from parallel lines Time synchronization Communication
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Multi-End Fault Location That Does Not Require Data Alignment
Each Relay Receives: Magnitude and Angle of Z2R ½I2R½
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Local and Remote Data Necessary for Fault Location
Rearrange Above Equation to Form a Quadratic Equation Solve Quadratic for Fault Location m Download Paper
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Multi-End Methods Needs Time Synchronized Data
Synchrophasors Synchronized samples Devices with data acquisition synchronized to a common time source Fixed sampling rate
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Series Compensated Lines
Line Side PT Bus Side PT Challenges Steady State Transient (phasor estimate is not stable) Subsynchronous MOV and bypass breaker switching Download Paper
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Three-Terminal Line
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Reduce From Three-Terminal Line to Two-Terminal Equivalent
V2_SP = V2S – Z2L_SP • I2S V2_TP = V2T – Z2L_TP • I2T Same Result V2_UP = V2U – Z2L_UP • I2U
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Use Two-Terminal Equivalent to Solve for m
I2_Eq = I2T + I2U V2_Eq = V2_TP Solve for m using SE or Multi-terminal (ME_I, ME) ME_I
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Mutually Coupled Lines
Download Paper
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Composite Lines Identifies faulted line section
Calculates distance to fault
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Intersection of Voltage Profiles Identifies Faulted Section
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Calculate Distance to Fault Within Faulted Section using ME method
Download Paper
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Impedance Method Approach Summary
Measure VA, VB, VC, IA, IB, IC Extract fundamental components Determine phasors and fault type Apply impedance algorithm
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Impedance Fault Location Methods
Single-End Method using local voltage and currents SE Multi-End Method using local voltage and currents, and remote currents MEI Multi-End Method using local and remote voltage and currents ME
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Some of the Challenging Situations for Z based Fault Location Methods
Short faults: faster relays and breakers- phasor estimate is not stable Faults associated with time-varying fault resistance-phasor estimate is not stable Series compensation
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Short Duration Faults Raw-Blue, Cosine Filtered-Green
Magnitude of Filtered Quantity-Red
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Lightning and Faults Launch Traveling Waves
tL tR Download Paper
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Double Ended TW Fault Location
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Single-End TW Fault Locator
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Image courtesy of Google
Results From Field 117.11km, 161 kV line 18 sections with 4 different tower configurations Challenges with existing impedance based fault location methods Image courtesy of Google
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Fault Location Results (161kV, 117.11km long line)
TW Patrol SE_Z ME_Z_I ME_Z CG 109.74 109.29 105.44 106.24 106.56 BG 61.12 61.41 54.75 60.69 60.70 108.23 107.60 101.59 106.43 98.85 98.98 95.20 98.37
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Temporary Fault Due to Insulator Flashover
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Insulator Flashover
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