Civil / Environmental Engineering in Industry
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Transcript Civil / Environmental Engineering in Industry
Power System Fundamentals
EE 317
Lecture 10
27 October 2010
Distribution System Overview
Role of the Substation
What is a Bus?
What is a Feeder?
What does Radial mean?
What are the methods used by engineers to
increase reliability in the distribution system?
Bahria Town Grid Station
Roles of a Substation
What are they?
Voltage transformation
Why?
Typical levels 230,138,69, 34.5 or 23 kV in
And 12kV or 4 kV out
System Protection
Substation Breakers : what do they protect?
The Public
Substation Transformers
Switchgear
System Reliability
Isolate Faults: trip a feeder or a bus as opposed
to an entire substation
TYPICAL Sub Station
Elements of sub station
Substations generally have switching, protection and
control equipment and one or more transformers.
In a large substation,circuit breakers are used to
interrupt any short-circuits or overload currents that may
occur on the network.
Smaller distribution stations may use recloser circuit
breakers or fuses for protection of distribution circuits.
Substations do not usually have generators, although
a power plant may have a substation nearby. Other
devices such as capacitors and voltage regulators may
also be located at a substation.
Functional Types of sub stations
Transmission substation:
A transmission substation connects two or more transmission
lines
Distribution substation:
A distribution substation transfers power from the transmission
system to the distribution system of an area
Collector sub station:
In distributed generation projects such as a wind farm, a collector
substation may be required
Switching sub station:
A switching substation is a substation which does not contain
transformers and operates only at a single voltage level.
Layout of a Typical Substation
Hi-voltage Breaker
Switchgear
Station Transformer
Switchgear
Bus
Feeder Switchgear (and/or breakers)
Single primary feeders
Multiple primary feeders
High Voltage Breaker
A circuit breaker is an automaticallyoperated electrical switch designed to
protect an electrical circuit from damage
caused by overload or short circuit. Its
basic function is to detect a fault condition
and, by interrupting continuity, to
immediately discontinue electrical flow.
Unlike a fuse, which operates once and
then has to be replaced, a circuit breaker
can be reset (either manually or
automatically) to resume normal
operation. Circuit breakers are made in
varying sizes, from small devices that
protect an individual household appliance
up to large switchgear designed to protect
high voltage circuits feeding an entire city.
Switch Gears
Switchgear for low voltages may be
entirely enclosed within a building. For
transmission levels of voltage (high
voltages over 66 kV), often switchgear
will be mounted outdoors and insulated
by air, though this requires a large
amount of space. Gas insulated
switchgear used for transmission-level
voltages saves space, although it has a
higher equipment cost. Oil insulated
switchgear generally takes up more
space, and is being phased out to
eliminate the risk of an oil spill.
Station Transformers
Station Transformers come in
varying sizes, depending on site
requirements, but are normally
connected to the network through
overhead connections which
results in exposed HV or LV
bushings that necessitate a fence
or other protective enclosure for
personnel safety and equipment
security.
Primary Radial Feeders
Layout
3 to any customer locations requiring it as well
as to other key points to maximize reliability
Sectionalizer locations
Feeder Tie locations
Single phase to all other locations (balancing
load connected to each phase)
Sectionalizing Switches
Switches WITHIN a feeder service area
Isolate Faults
Allow majority of feeder customers served to be
put back into service during an extended repair
Feeder Tie Switches
Switches BETWEEN two different feeders to
interconnect them
Allow an adjacent feeder region to be served by
a feeder that is still in service when a substation
problem or feeder fault which can be isolated
from the substation side has disrupted service
on an entire feeder
Distribution Service
Primary Feeder serves Distribution pots (or
transformers):
Normally Fused
Switchable Transformer
Serves Secondary circuit
distribution voltage = 120/240 V
Houses/streetlights connected to secondary
Service Entrance Cable to Home/Meter
Distribution Transformers
Because of connection to overhead, open wire
feeders these transformers are often exposed to
lightning strikes
To minimize insulation breakdown and
transformer failure lightning arrestors are added
Distribution Equipment
Lightning arrestor
Bushing Insert
11-kV Insulator
Fused Cutout
Terminating Dead-End
66- kV insulator
3- 0.4 kV spacer
Secondary capacitor