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Lecture 6 Circuit Breakers

Circuit breakers are used to control and isolate electrical circuits. They contain fixed and moving contacts that remain closed during normal operation but open to break the circuit during faults. When the contacts open, an arc is struck that must be extinguished quickly to interrupt the current. Various methods are used to extinguish the arc depending on the type of circuit breaker, including increasing the arc's resistance through cooling and lengthening, or taking advantage of current zeros in AC systems. Common circuit breaker mediums include air, oil, sulfur hexafluoride gas, and high vacuum, each with their own advantages for arc interruption. Analysis of fault currents helps understand the circuit breaking process.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
187 views31 pages

Lecture 6 Circuit Breakers

Circuit breakers are used to control and isolate electrical circuits. They contain fixed and moving contacts that remain closed during normal operation but open to break the circuit during faults. When the contacts open, an arc is struck that must be extinguished quickly to interrupt the current. Various methods are used to extinguish the arc depending on the type of circuit breaker, including increasing the arc's resistance through cooling and lengthening, or taking advantage of current zeros in AC systems. Common circuit breaker mediums include air, oil, sulfur hexafluoride gas, and high vacuum, each with their own advantages for arc interruption. Analysis of fault currents helps understand the circuit breaking process.

Uploaded by

Syed Khizar
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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Circuit Breakers

1
Introduction
 Circuit breaker is an electrical isolation equipment
 Make or break a circuit either manually or by remote control
under normal conditions
 Break a circuit automatically under fault conditions
 Make a circuit either manually or by remote control under
fault conditions
 Essentially consists of fixed and moving contacts /
electrodes
 Remains closed under normal operation
 Open after receiving trip command from
• User directly or by remote control
• Protection relays

2
Introduction ..

3
The Arc Phenomenon
 After the contacts separation, the current continues to
flow due to arc struck between separated contacts.
 Delays the current interruption process
 Generates enormous heat which may cause damage to the
system or to the circuit breaker itself.
 The main problem in a circuit breaker is to extinguish
the arc within the shortest possible time so that heat
generated by it may not reach a dangerous value.
 The arc provides a low resistance path and
consequently the current in the circuit remains
uninterrupted so long as the arc persists.
 During the arcing period, the current flowing between
the contacts depends upon the arc resistance.
4
Arc Extinguishment
High Resistance Method
 Arc can extinguish with the increase in the arc resistance
 Degree of ionisation— the arc resistance increases with
the decrease in the number of ionised particles between the
contacts
 Cooling the arc
 Removing the ionised particles
 Length of the arc— the arc resistance increases with the
length of the arc
 Increased separation of contacts
 Cross-section of arc— the arc resistance increases with
the decrease in area of X-section of the arc.
 Passing the arc through a narrow opening or by having smaller area
of contacts.
5
Arc Extinguishment ..
Current zero method
 Applicable to AC systems only.
 50Hz system have current zero crossing after every
10ms.
 All modern high power AC CBs employ this method
for arc extinction.
 Arc resistance is kept low until current crosses zero
where the arc extinguishes naturally.
 Medium between the contacts still contains ions and electrons
 Therefore, it has small dielectric strength which can easily
broken down by the rising contact voltage to the value known
as re-striking voltage.
 If such a breakdown does occur, the arc will persist for
another half cycle . 6
Arc Extinguishment ..
 Arc Voltage: The voltage that appears across the
contacts of the circuit breaker during the arcing
period.
 Restriking voltage: Transient voltage that appears
across the contacts at or near current zero during
arcing period.
 Also known as transient recovery voltage (TRV)
 If the dielectric strength of the medium builds up more
rapidly than the restriking voltage, the arc fails to restrike and
the current will be interrupted.
 Recovery voltage: It is the normal frequency (50 Hz)
rms voltage that appears across the contacts of the
circuit breaker after final arc extinction.
 Approximately equal to the system voltage.
7
CB Operating Times
 The operating time of a circuit breaker involves a
number of carefully defined time intervals, such as:

8
CB fluids
 The basic function of a circuit
breaker is to insert an insulating
medium.
 The fluid medium commonly used
in circuit breakers depends on the
type and rating of the breaker
 Air at atmospheric pressure
 Compressed air
 Mineral oil
 Sulfur hexafluoride (SF6)
 Ultra-high vacuum
 These fluids vary widely in their
relative dielectric strengths
9
Oil CBs
 Earlier circuit breaker technology.
 Insulating oil (e.g. transformer oil) is
used as an arc quenching medium.
 The first oil circuit breakers were of
simple design
 Switch put in a tank filled with mineral oil,
without any arc quenching device.
 Then metal explosion pot was used.
 Breaker was fitted with an insulating arcing
chamber through which the breaker contacts
moved.
 The oil filled arcing chamber, fixes the arc
 Increased pressure inside the arcing chamber
improved the cooling effects on the arc.
10
Oil CBs ..
 Later, the design of the arcing
chamber was further improved
by pumping mechanisms, such
as cross jet explosion pot
 A cross flow of oil was created,
giving extra cooling to the arc.
 The gas due to arc exerts pressure on
the oil in the back passage.
 Moving contact uncovers the arc
splitter ducts, fresh oil is forced
across the arc path.
 The arc is driven sideways into the
arc splitters which increase the arc
length, causing arc extinction.
11
Oil CBs ..
 A next step in the development of
oil circuit breakers was the low/
minimum oil circuit breaker.
 The contacts and arcing chamber placed
into a porcelain insulator instead of in a
bulky metal tank.
 Employs solid materials for insulation
purposes
 Uses a small quantity of oil which is
just sufficient for arc extinction.
 The oil behaves identically in bulk as
well as low oil circuit breaker.
 By using suitable arc control devices,
the arc extinction can be further
facilitated.
12
Air Blast CB
 Air is used as insulator in outdoor-type
substations and for HV transmission lines.
 Air can also be used as extinguishing medium
for current interruption.
 At atmospheric pressure, the interrupting
capability is limited to low voltage and
medium voltages only.
 Compressed air can interrupt higher currents at
considerable higher-voltage levels due to high cooling
power of air at high pressure.
 The arcing products are completely removed by the blast
whereas the oil deteriorates with successive operations.
 The air blast circuit breakers are finding wide applications
in high voltage installations, typically around 110kV.
13
Air Blast CB ..
 In cross-blast type CB, compressed air blows the arc
into a segmented arc-chute compartment.
 Because the arc voltage increases with the arc length, this is
also called high-resistance interruption
 In the axial-blast design, the arc is cooled in axial
direction by the airflow.
 Because the arc voltage hardly increases this is called low-
resistance interruption

14
SF6 CB
 SF6 gas has superior dielectric properties for arc
quenching.
 Contacts are opened in a high pressure flow of SF6 gas
from reservoir to interruption chamber and an arc is struck
between them.
 Conducting free electrons in the arc are rapidly captured
by the gas to form relatively immobile negative ions.
 Loss of conducting electrons in the arc quickly builds up
enough insulation strength.
 Developed for voltages up to 115 kV to 230 kV, power
ratings 10 MVA to 20 MVA.
 Interruption time is less than 3 cycles.
 Additional equipment is required to recondition SF6 after
each breaking operation.
15
Vacuum CB
 Metallurgical developments made it possible to
manufacture gas-free electrodes.
 Since vacuum offers the highest insulating strength, it
has far superior arc quenching properties than any
other medium.
 Fats operation – interruption occurs on first zero-
crossing.
 The production of arc is due to the ionisation of metal
ions and depends upon the material of contacts.
 Arc extinguished quickly as metallic vapours, ions,
electronic diffuse quickly on metallic surfaces.
 The arc extinction in a vacuum breaker occurs with a
short contact separation.
16
Vacuum CB ..

 Investment cost is very high. If the operation and


maintenance costs are comprehensively considered, the
price is not so high.
 Faster operation also require corresponding over-voltage
management.
 Faster operation also require corresponding over-voltage
management.
17
Analysis of Circuit Interruption

 Before current interruption,


 C is short-circuited by the fault.
 Short-circuit current in breaker
is limited only by L.
 Therefore, the short-circuit
current will lag the voltage by
90º.

18
Analysis of Circuit Interruption..
 Simplified form of fault current
𝑑
 𝐸𝑚 sin(𝜔𝑡 + 𝛼) = 𝑅𝑖𝑓 + 𝐿 𝑖𝑓
𝑑𝑡
𝑅
𝐸𝑚 −𝐿 𝑡
 𝑖𝑓 𝑡 = 𝑒 sin 𝛼 − 𝜃 + sin 𝜔𝑡 + ∅ − 𝜃
𝑍

𝑍 = 𝑅2 + 𝜔𝐿 2

𝜔𝐿
𝜃 = tan−1 𝑅
α is angle at switching
instant

 After the interruption of current


 Circuit contains both L and C
 Second order oscillation
 Magnitude can approximately rise to 2Em
• CB insulation must be able to withstand it
19
Analysis of Circuit Interruption..
𝑑𝑖 1
 𝑣 = 𝑅𝑖 + 𝐿 + ‫𝑡𝑑 𝑖 ׬‬ 𝐿
𝐶
is also known as
𝑑𝑡 𝐶
𝑣
 𝑖𝑐 = 𝑒 −𝛿𝑡 sin 𝜔𝑛 𝑡 − 𝑖𝑐𝑜 𝑒 −𝛿𝑡 sin 𝜔𝑛 𝑡 surge impedance
𝜔𝑛 𝐿
𝑣 𝑣
 𝑖𝑐 = sin 𝜔𝑛 𝑡 = sin 𝜔𝑛 𝑡
𝜔𝑛 𝐿 𝐿
iC
𝐶
v vC
 Voltage across C
1 1 𝐶
 𝑣𝐶 = ‫𝐶𝑖 ׬‬ 𝑑𝑡 = ‫𝑣 ׬‬ sin 𝜔𝑛 𝑡 𝑑𝑡
𝐶 𝐶 𝐿

1 𝐶
 𝑣𝐶 = . 𝑣. . 𝐿𝐶 − cos 𝜔𝑛 𝑡 + 𝑘
𝐶 𝐿
 𝑣𝐶 = 𝑣 − cos 𝜔𝑛 𝑡 + 𝑘
 Initial Condition: vC=0, k=1
 𝑣𝐶 = 𝑣 − cos 𝜔𝑛 𝑡 + 1
 𝑣𝐶𝑚𝑎𝑥 = 2𝑣
20
Analysis of Circuit Interruption..
Upon the fault clearance by breaker:
 Contacts are opened and the arc finally extinguishes at
some current zero.
 The generator voltage v is suddenly applied to the
inductance and capacitance in series.
 Transients are generated at natural frequency of LC circuit
1
𝑓𝑛 =
2𝜋 𝐿𝐶
 The system losses cause the oscillations to decay fairly
rapidly but the initial overshoot increases the possibility of
arc re-striking the arc.
 This transient rise in voltage is the restriking voltage
21
RRRV
 RRRV is the rate of rise of restriking voltage, which
depends on
 Recovery voltage – i.e. normal system voltage
• Magnitude can approximately rise to 2Em
 fn – RRRV is high for high natural frequency
 For a short-circuit occurring near the power station
bus-bars, C being small, the natural frequency can be
high.
 Consequently, RRRV will attain a large value.
 Thus the worst condition for a circuit breaker would be
that when the fault takes place near the bus-bars of terminal
power station.

22
Current Chopping
 Phenomenon of current interruption
before the natural current zero.
 In vacuum interrupters
 High speed movement of contacts can be
obtained due to
• Low mass of breaker contacts
• Small separation requirement
 Arc is to be interrupted at first zero-crossing within a half
cycle.
 Arc usually tends to go out even before current zero due to
rapid dielectric recovery.
 As a result, current can instantaneously drops to zero with
high di/dt.
23
Current Chopping
 The problem can be more
severe in air blast CB due
to multiple chops
 The powerful air-blast can
interrupt arc before actual
zero-crossing.
 The prospective restriking voltage can be very high as
compared to the dielectric strength gained by the gap so that
the breaker restrikes.
 Chop can again occurs due to deionizing force still in action.
 The arc current this time is smaller than the previous case.
 This induces a lower prospective voltage to re-ignite the arc.
 Consequently, the final interruption of current takes place
after several chopping attempts.
24
Current Chopping
 Interruption on non-zero current cause production of
high voltage transients across breaker contacts.
 Transfer of inductive energy (Li2/2) to capacitance can
be approximated as
1 2 1 2
𝐿𝑖 = 𝐶𝑒 𝐿
is also known as surge
2 2 𝐶
𝐿 impedance or characteristic
𝑒=𝑖 impedance
𝐶

 The breaker insulation and downstream equipment has


to bear this prospective voltage e, which increase the
design requirements of overall system.

25
Practice Problem
50 Hz, 11 kV, 3-phase alternator with earthed neutral has a
reactance of 5 ohms per phase and is connected to a bus-bar
through a circuit breaker. The distributed capacitance upto circuit
breaker between phase and neutral in 0·01 μF. Determine
i. Peak re-striking voltage across the contacts of the breaker
2
= 2𝐸𝑚𝑎𝑥 =2× × 11 = 17.96𝑘𝑉
3
ii. Frequency of oscillations
𝑋𝐿 5 1
𝐿= = = 15.9𝑚𝐻 𝑓𝑛 = = 12.61𝑘𝐻𝑧
2𝜋𝑓 100𝜋 2𝜋 𝐿𝐶
iii. The average rate of rise of re-striking voltage upto the first
peak 1 1
𝑇𝑛 = = 12.61𝑘𝐻𝑧 = 79𝜇𝑠 𝑇𝑛 = 39.5𝜇𝑠
𝑓𝑛 2
𝑃𝑒𝑎𝑘 17.96𝑘𝑉
𝑅𝑅𝑅𝑉 = = = 453000 𝑘𝑉
𝑇𝑖𝑚𝑒 𝑡𝑜 𝑝𝑒𝑎𝑘 39.5𝜇𝑠
26
Practice Problem
In a short circuit test on a circuit breaker, the following
readings were obtained on single frequency transient:
i. Time to reach the peak re-striking voltage is 50μs
ii. The peak re-striking voltage, 100 kV
Determine the average RRRV and frequency of
oscillations.
𝑃𝑒𝑎𝑘 100𝑘𝑉
𝑅𝑅𝑅𝑉 = = = 2 × 106 𝑘𝑉
𝑇𝑖𝑚𝑒 𝑡𝑜 𝑝𝑒𝑎𝑘 50𝜇𝑠

𝑇𝑛 = 2 × 𝑡𝑖𝑚𝑒 𝑡𝑜 𝑝𝑒𝑎𝑘 = 100𝜇𝑠


1 1
𝑓𝑛 = = = 10𝑘𝐻𝑧
𝑇𝑛 100𝜇𝑠

27
Resistance Switching
 To reduce the severity of the transient oscillations, a
resistance is connected across the contacts of the
circuit breaker.
 After contact opening, part of arc current flows
through shunt resistance.
 Decrease of arc current and an increase in the rate of de-
ionisation of the arc path.
 Also reduce the di/dt of chopping current MOSA

Valve type
arrester

28
CB Ratings
 Breaking capacity: The current (or MVA) that a circuit
breaker is capable of breaking at given recovery voltage under
specified conditions.
 The prospective short-circuit current should not exceed the rated breaking
capacity.
 Making Capacity: Current magnitude during the first cycle of
current wave after the CB closing.
 Possibility of CB closing during short circuit always exists.
 Therefore, making capacity should be equal to peak breaking capacity.
 Approximate DC component = 0.8 × (Peak AC component)
• DC component dies away rapidly
• Typical decrement factor is 0·8 per cycle
 Making capacity = 1.8 × (Peak AC component)
 Short-time rating: It is the period for which the CB is able to
carry fault current while remaining closed.
 Normal current rating: The current which the CB is capable
of carrying continuously under normal operation.
29
Practice Problem
 A circuit breaker is rated as 1500 A, 1000 MVA, 33
kV, 3-second, 3-phase oil circuit breaker. Point out
i. Rated normal current 𝐼𝑅𝑎𝑡𝑒𝑑 = 1500𝐴

ii. Breaking capacity 𝑆𝑏𝑟𝑒𝑎𝑘𝑖𝑛𝑔 = 1000𝑀𝑉𝐴

iii. Rated symmetrical breaking current (symmetrical current


breaking capacity) 𝐼𝑏𝑟𝑒𝑎𝑘𝑖𝑛𝑔 = 𝑆1∅ = 1000𝑀𝑉𝐴 = 17496𝐴 (rms)
𝑉1∅ 3×33𝑘𝑉

iv. Rated making current


𝐼𝑚𝑎𝑘𝑖𝑛𝑔 = 1.8 × 2 × 17496 = 44614 (Peak)
v. Short-time rating
17496A for 3s

vi. Rated service voltage. 33kV


30
31

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