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Lecture 1: Introduction To Power Distribution Systems

This lecture provides an introduction to power distribution systems, including key components like substations, feeders, switches, protective devices, and voltage regulation equipment. It discusses the functions of common devices used in distribution systems like circuit breakers, fuses, reclosers, and sectionalizers. It also provides an overview of the structure of distribution systems including primary and secondary distribution, common voltage levels, and examples of protection schemes using reclosers and sectionalizers.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
63 views23 pages

Lecture 1: Introduction To Power Distribution Systems

This lecture provides an introduction to power distribution systems, including key components like substations, feeders, switches, protective devices, and voltage regulation equipment. It discusses the functions of common devices used in distribution systems like circuit breakers, fuses, reclosers, and sectionalizers. It also provides an overview of the structure of distribution systems including primary and secondary distribution, common voltage levels, and examples of protection schemes using reclosers and sectionalizers.

Uploaded by

ante mitar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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ECE 5984: Power Distribution System Analysis

Lecture 1: Introduction to Power Distribution Systems


Reference: Textbook, Chapter 1
Instructor: V. Kekatos

1
The big picture

2
Distribution substations and feeders

•  Switching

•  Protection

•  Voltage transformation

•  Voltage regulation

•  Metering
§  analog current recordings
§  meters on substation and/or feeder
§  digital meters record min/max/avg of
current, voltage, power, power factor
over 15 min, 30 min, or 1 hr
3
Switching and protective devices

•  Switching devices
§  manual switches
§  remote controlled switches

•  Protective devices
§  circuit breakers
§  fuses
§  overcurrent relays
§  reclosers
§  sectionalizers

Photo courtesy of K. Schneider (PNNL)

4
Switches

•  Simple devices; no control/communication

•  Located at substation or feeder

•  Isolate equipment for maintenance at


substation, or reconfigure feeders

•  Cannot interrupt fault currents and lack


synchronization equipment

•  Manual control, or remote control via


SCADA signals Photo courtesy of K. Schneider (PNNL)

•  Control equipment located at bottom of supporting structure or utility pole

5
Circuit breakers

•  Similar to switches, but can break fault currents

•  Used to protect rather than disconnect

•  Located at substation due to size (rating)

•  They can be operated remotely

•  Classified based on material used to quench arc


(air, oil, vacuum, SF6)

Photo courtesy of K. Schneider (PNNL)

6
Detailed structure

•  sub-transmission is optional
e.g., 115:4 kV [IEEE 123-bus]

138:69 kV

69:14 kV
Distribution substation
•  Typical distribution feeders 15-200 MVA @ 2-46 kV
4 MVA @ 4 kV
12 MVA @ 12.47 kV
20 MVA @ 23 kV
30 MVA @ 34 kV

14:480/208 kV
•  Inline transformers 14:4 kV
[Glover, Sarma, Overbye]
7
Breaker-and-a-half scheme

8
Voltage transformers

On-Load Tap-Changing (OLTC) transformer


§  a.k.a. Tap Changing Under-Load Transf. (TCUL)
§  located at the substation; can serve multiple feeders
§  maintains constant low-voltage side under varying
distribution load or transmission-side conditions
§  can be substituted with transformer & regulator

In-line transformer and regulators

Distribution transformers

9
Primary and secondary distribution
Distribution transformers (pole/pad-mounted) form the boundaries

Classes change: IEEE 1547 defines MV as 1-35 kV …

10
Distribution lines

three-phase four-wire multi-grounded Y

three-phase Delta (under replacement)

[Blume]
11
240/120 V single-phase distribution transformers

[Blume]

12
208/120 V three-phase distribution transformers

[Blume]

13
480/277 V three-phase distribution transformers

[Blume]

Small single-phase transformers provide 120 V from 480 V for lighting/office


14
Voltage regulation
•  Voltage magnitude should lie within ±5% of nominal (114-126 for 120 V)

•  Voltage regulators: induction devices in shunt or series with regulated circuit for the
control of its voltage
•  Capacitors: power factor correction (include switching and protective elements)

15
Radial feeders
primary ‘main’ feeder:
2-30 MVA @ 2-46 kV
secondaries:
5-500 kVA @ 120-480 V

3, V, single-phase laterals

in-line transformers

distribution transformers
240/120 V 1-phase (split-phase)
208/120 V 3-phase
480/277/120 V 3-phase
400/230 V 3-phase (Europe)

regulators and cap banks

protection devices

16
Distribution feeder map

•  Transformers (kVA rating, connection)


•  Shunt capacitors (kVAR rating, phase)
•  Voltage regulators (phase, ratios, compensator
settings)
•  Lines (OH/UG, distance, conductor, phase)
•  Switches (NO/NC)
•  Geographical distances
•  Conductors (radius, diameter, resistance)

See e.g., the actual IEEE 123-bus benchmark…


17
Fuses

•  Low-cost devices used to interrupt fault currents

•  Once fuse interrupts overcurrent, it has to be


manually replaced by a line crew

•  Fuse coordination: the practice of selecting fuse sizes


so that fuse closest to the fault blows first

•  Fuse coordination requires knowledge of system


load and gets complicated with distributed resources

Photo courtesy of K. Schneider

•  Operate on an inverse time curve:


the higher the fault current, the quicker the fuse will blow

18
Example: fuse protection

•  Permanent line to ground fault on line 705-712

•  Fuse blows due to overcurrent, thus isolating single-


phase lateral

•  Customers at node 712 and 742 call in to report power


outage

•  Utility dispatches a line crew to investigate

•  Line crew locates fault and repairs condition

•  Line crew replaces blown fuse with a new one

•  Single-phase lateral us back to service Photo courtesy of K. Schneider

19
Protection relays

•  Use local measurements to generate control signals

•  Fuses measure only current; relays measure


voltage and current so can also estimate
- real and reactive power
- sequence components
- phasor measurements

•  They can be accessed remotely for maintenance


and updates

Photo courtesy of K. Schneider

20
Reclosers
•  Designed to minimize number of
customers affected by momentary fault

•  Not needed in transmission or underground


distribution systems

Operation
1.  Fault occurs
2.  Recloser interrupts fault current and remains
open for a time period (1-2 sec) to allow
Photo courtesy of K. Schneider
momentary faults to clear
3.  Recloser closes back into fault and sees if fault
has cleared
4.  If fault has cleared, recloser stays closed;
otherwise, recloser reopens
5.  Number of tries to reconnect is user-configurable
(usually 3)
6.  After final ‘shot’, recloser locks open
7.  Utility crew must locally reset the unit
21
Sectionalizers

•  Operate on local measurements and with


proper coordination of upstream reclosers

•  Combination of reclosers and sectionalizers


is ideal for system with permanent and Recloser

temporary faults

Operation
1.  Sectionalizer detects overcurrent but cannot

Sectionalizer #1

Sectionalizer #2

Sectionalizer #3
interrupt fault
2.  It starts counting recloser shots
3.  During the second/third recloser shots, the
sectionalizer opens under no load
Photo courtesy of K. Schneider

22
Example: sectionalizer protection
•  Permanent line to ground fault on line 710-735

•  Overcurrent causes recloser 730-709 to open

•  Sect. 708-733 detects overcurrent and prepares to open

•  Sect.738-711 does not detect overcurrent

•  Recloser waits and closes back in; repeats 2-3 times

•  Sect. 708-733 opens after 2nd or 3rd shot during no load

•  Recloser closes back in, sees no fault, and remains closed

•  Customers downstream of 708 report power outage and


utility dispatches line crew

•  Line crew locates fault; repairs condition; and recloses sect.


Photo courtesy of K. Schneider

•  Lateral back to service

23

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