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Ee 2353 High Voltage Engineering Faculty Name:A.JAIBUNISHA Faculty Code: EE 58 Designation: LECTURER Department: EEE

The document discusses high voltage engineering and overvoltages in electrical power systems. It covers various causes of overvoltages including lightning, switching surges, and their characteristics. Lightning occurs due to charge separation within thunderclouds, which can cause voltage surges over 1 million volts on transmission lines. Switching surges are generated during operation of circuit breakers and energizing of transmission lines, and can be up to 6 times the normal voltage. The document outlines methods to minimize overvoltages including proper transmission line design, use of ground wires and surge arresters.

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Faraz Humayun
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
48 views23 pages

Ee 2353 High Voltage Engineering Faculty Name:A.JAIBUNISHA Faculty Code: EE 58 Designation: LECTURER Department: EEE

The document discusses high voltage engineering and overvoltages in electrical power systems. It covers various causes of overvoltages including lightning, switching surges, and their characteristics. Lightning occurs due to charge separation within thunderclouds, which can cause voltage surges over 1 million volts on transmission lines. Switching surges are generated during operation of circuit breakers and energizing of transmission lines, and can be up to 6 times the normal voltage. The document outlines methods to minimize overvoltages including proper transmission line design, use of ground wires and surge arresters.

Uploaded by

Faraz Humayun
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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EE 2353 HIGH VOLTAGE


ENGINEERING

Faculty Name :A.JAIBUNISHA


Faculty Code : EE 58
Designation : LECTURER
Department : EEE
UNIT - I

OVER VOLTAGES IN ELECTRICAL


POWER SYSTEMS
LIGHTING

 Causes of over voltage


 Lightning phenomenon
 Charge formation of Lightning
 Rate of Charging of thunder cloud
 Mechanism of lightning strokes
 Characteristics of Lightning strokes
3
LIGHTING

 Factors contributing to good line


design
 Protection afforded by ground wires.
 Tower footing resistance
 Interaction between lightning and
power system
 Mathematical model of Lightning
4
Causes of Lightning
 Lightning phenomenon
- peak discharge in which charge
accumulated in the cloud into
neighbouring cloud or to the ground

 Electrode separation – cloud to cloud


or cloud to ground is about 10 km or
more
5
CHARGE FORMATION OF CLOUD
 Positive and negative charges
become separated by heavy air
current with ice crystals in the upper
part and rain in the lower region.
 Charge separation depends on
height of cloud (200 – 10,000m).
 Charge centers at a distance about
300 – 2km

6
CHARGE FORMATION OF CLOUD
 Charge inside the cloud – 1 to 100 C
 Cloud potential – 107 to 108 V
 Gradient within a cloud – 100 V/cm
 Gradient at initial discharge point –
10kV/cm
 Energy at discharge – 250 kWhr

7
CHARGE FORMATION OF CLOUD

8
MECHANISM OF LIGHTNING FLASH

 Pilot streamer and Stepped leader

 Ground streamer and return stroke

 Subsequent strokes

9
PILOT STREAMER AND STEPPED
LEADER

10
GROUND STREAMER AND RETURN
STROKE

11
CHARACTERISTICS OF LIGHTNING
STROKES
 Current-time characteristics
 Time to peak or Rate of rise
 Probability distribution of current and
time
 Wave shapes of lightning voltage and
current

12
LIGHTNING CURRENT

 Short front time - 10µs


 Tail time – several ms.

13
RATE OF RISE
 50% lightning stroke current –
greater than 7.5kA/µs.
 10% lightning strokes current –
exceeds 25 kA/µs.
 Stroke current above half value –
more than 30µs.

14
SURGE VOLTAGE

 Maximum surge voltage in


transmission line – 5MV
 Most of the surge voltage is less than
1000 kV on line.
 Front time – 2 to 10 µs
 Tail time – 20 to 100 µs
 Rate of rise of voltage – 1MV/ µs

15
LIGHTNING STROKES

 Direct stroke
directly discharges on to
transmission line or line wires
 Induced stroke
cloud generates negative charge at
its base, the earth object develop
induced positive charge

16
OVER VOLTAGE DUE TO SWITCHING
SURGES

INTRODUCTION
 In switching, the over voltage thus

generated last for longer durations and


therefore are severe and more dangerous
to the system
 The switching over voltages depends on

the normal voltage of the system and


hence increase with increased system
voltage

17
ORIGIN OF SWITCHING
SURGES
 Making and breaking of electric
circuits with switchgear may results
in abnormal over voltages in power
systems having large inductances
and capacitances.
 over voltages may go as high as 6
times the normal power frequency
voltage.
18
ORIGIN OF SWITCHING
SURGES
 In circuit breaking operation switching
surges with a high rate of rise of voltage
may cause repeated restriking of the arc
between the contacts of a circuit breaker,
thereby causing destruction of the circuit
breaker contacts.
 Switching surges may include high natural
frequencies of the system, a damped
normal frequency voltage component, or
restriking and recovery voltage of the
system with successive reflected waves
from terminations.
19
CHARACTERISTICS OF
SWITCHING SURGES
 De-energizing of transmission lines, cables,
shunt capacitor, banks, etc.
 Disconnection of unloaded transformers,
reactors, etc.
 Energization or reclosing of lines and reactive
loads.
 Sudden switching off of loads.
 Short circuit and fault clearances.
 Resonance phenomenon like ferro-resonance,
arcing grounds, etc.

20
CONTROL OF OVERVOLTAGES
DUE TO SWITCHING
 Energization of transmission lines in one or
more steps by inserting resistances and
withdrawing them afterwards.
 Phase controlled closing of circuit
breakers.
 Drainage of trapped charges before
reclosing
 Use of shunt reactors.
 Limiting switching surges by suitable surge
diverters.

21
PROTECTION AGAINST
OVERVOLTAGS
 Minimizing the lightning overvoltages
are done by suitable line designs,
 Providing guard and ground wires,
 Using surge diverters.

22
PROTECTION AGAINST
OVERVOLTAGS
 Shielding the overhead lines by using
ground wires above the phase wires,
 Using ground rods and counter-poise
wires,
 Including protective devices like
explosion gaps, protector tubes on
the lines, and surge diverters at the
line terminations and sudstations

23

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