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Published byDale Wood Modified over 9 years ago
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TIMING APPLICATIONS OF GPS High Energy Transmission with High Precision GPS Time Gaurav Sharma John Hannah Vivekanand Sivaraman
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ABOUT BPA oBonneville Power Administration – Power Supplier in the Pacific North West. Serves Oregon, Washington, W Montana, and most of Idaho. o o390 switching stations o16500 MW Power Capacity & 8600 MW annual delivery o181 Customers including industries and public utilities
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Timing Applications in Energy Transmission Power generation and Power transfer Power Outages Disturbance Records Fault Location Real Time Phase Measurements
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BPA: Timing Techniques and Problems Central Time System –Not enough accuracy for Fault locators –signal subject to distortions High frequency pulse over Microwave for Fault Locators –Used up a lot of available bandwidth Local Time Code Generators for remote stations –Time code generator needs to be manually resynchronized every couple of months – no resetting at regular interval Radio reception from GOES or WWV –GOES receivers off the correct time. –GOES signal subject to interference and eclipses. –GOES satellite system problems – repositioning - requires antenna repointing. GOES: Geostationary Orbit Earth Satellite WWV: Radio Station, Fort Collins, Colorado
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BPA: Timing Techniques Problems Possible Solution: GPS 1 microsecond accuracy Multiple satellite redundancy High Reliability BPA Lab Testing – showed high accuracy, precision and reliability in timing.
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GPS Implementation in Central Time System New system - 3 primary sources, 1 voting switchover unit + Monitoring Systems Primary sources equipped with GPS receivers, each having an antenna and a power unit. 2 with battery back up. 1 has a rubidium oscillator in the event of GPS input failure. Improved Switching Tolerance (1 Microsecond level) (What is switching?)
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GPS Implementation in Fault Location and Rectification When a fault occurs on a transmission line a high frequency wave propagates in both directions from the fault. Compare the arrival time at switching stations on the either side of fault for locating it. Problems with Old System: –Synchronization pulse used a lot of bandwidth (expensive) over the analog microwave system –Available to major stations only GPS Implementation: –Initially, for the synchronizing the pulse to UTC only - –Later, also as FLAR units –Available to even minor and remote stations
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GPS Implementation in Phasor Measurements Phasor: a vector representation of a sinusoidal quantity that includes a magnitude and a phase angle. The power system in North America is a three-phase 60Hz sinusoid. Phase angle between two stations determines the power transfer between stations. Phasor observations used for monitoring. (Require 0.1 electrical degree accuracy for monitoring Or 5 micro-sec synchronization between monitoring units.) GPS used as precise timing source.(The accuracy of time measurement ~1 micro-sec).
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Conclusions Expensive upgrades and redundancies were avoided. GPS provided a comprehensive way for implementation of accurate timing system – no need for different timing system for every other system. Stood the tests for accuracy, reliability, coverage and cost.
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