1. Introduction
In our case, preparation of the short circuit test consists of switching the primary side of the MV/LV transformer to the medium voltage source. It is called powering the test transformer. Then, the set-up is ready to perform DUT tests. Powering of the test transformer was performed with the MV Vacuum Circuit Breaker, the brand name EVOLIS 17.5 kV, product of Merlin Gerin [
1], as shown in
Figure 1 and, during the test, in
Figure 2. The magnetizing current of the transformer can be limited with the current limiting inductors, as shown in
Figure 1.
From that instant, the time-phase controller is waiting for the release of the operator to start the test. However, sometimes, under some circumstances, the controller starts the test without the operator’s release. Such situation is undesired and can be destructive for the device under test.
The paper is a continuation of the research works of the authors. reported in [
2].
The laboratory launched the project of developing the new time phase controller compatible to the environment of dedication. In parallel to the development of the mentioned hardware, the electromagnetic environment of the high current laboratory is identified in order to consciously build hardware that is immune to the required range. This paper reports these investigations. The aim is to establish the scope of immunity tests and severity levels, the passing of which will ensure the operation of the new controller without malfunction.
First of all, the tests described in the standard [
3] were requested. Generic standard [
3] is dedicated to the environment of power stations, high and medium voltage substations as well as indoor industrial facilities directly connected to the MV power network. This standard is mandatory for electronic equipment applied in the high-current laboratory under consideration.
One of the tests required in the standard [
3] is immunity against slow and fast damped oscillatory waves. The generic standard requires testing this immunity according to basic standards in [
4].
It is explained in [
4] that the slow damped oscillatory waves are particularly related to the switching of disconnectors in HV/MV open-air substations and is particularly related to the switching of HV busbars. The fast damped oscillatory waves are present in substations of the power network, produced by switchgears and controlgears. In that context, air insulated substations (AIS), made up of only air insulated switchgear, and gas insulated substations (GIS), made up of only gas insulated metal enclosed switchgears, are mentioned.
Citation from [
4]: “During opening or closing disconnector operations, between both contacts of the operated device, a large number of restrikes take place due to the slow speed of the contacts. Therefore, disconnector switch operations generate very fast transients, which propagate as traveling waves in the busbars of the substation. The electrical length of conductors and busbars will determine the oscillation frequencies of the transient overvoltages”.
The time phase controller itself is placed in the control room, as shown in
Figure 2, but the signal and control cables originate either in the medium voltage area, green dashed line in
Figure 2, or in the low voltage area, orange dashed lines in
Figure 2. Electromagnetic disturbance, most likely manifested there with a transient electric field, can couple with the cables via cross talks and can penetrate the controller causing its malfunctioning.
Identification of the transient fields during the powering of the test transformer is indispensable for assessing the hazard of the EM interference of the time-phase controller.
As the result of the literature research conducted by the authors in the scope of electromagnetic environments in high current laboratories, papers [
5,
6,
7] must be pointed out. The publications [
8,
9] can be mentioned but they concern only low-frequency magnetic fields.
A rough identification of the electromagnetic phenomena by short circuit tests in the mentioned laboratory is reported in [
10]. The adjective “rough” is justified in that context because the first measurements indicated slowly damped oscillatory waves accompanying the closing of the circuit breaker.
The phenomenon of the damped oscillatory wave can extend in the frequency range up to hundreds of MHz. However, the frequency band of the field probe used during the measurements reported in [
10] reaches only 400 kHz. It is definitively too low to capture the phenomenon reliable. This reason, as well as the peculiarity of an electromagnetic environment installation with a vacuum insulated breaker, convinces the authors to retake the measurement with adequate field probes, as suggested in the conclusions of [
10], and record transients at the signal ports of the time-phase controller.
In order to exclude or confirm the origin of the repetition of the damped oscillatory waves, the circuit breaker was investigated in the stand-alone operation.
2. Repetitive Damped Oscillatory Waves
The scope of the standard [
4] encompasses the repetitive damped oscillatory waves occurring mainly in power, control and signal cables installed in high voltage and medium voltage (HV/MV) substations. This phenomenon accompanies switching operations in HV/MV open-air substations. It gives rise to sharp transients, with rising times of the order of some tens of nanoseconds.
The formula of the ideal single damped oscillatory wave, according to [
4] is as follows
where
is the natural frequency of the excited circuit
, (
) is the attenuation constant and product of
n, and
is approximately equal to the front time of the first slope of the oscillations (
).
In the standard [
4], slow damped oscillations with 100 kHz and 1 MHz, as well as fast damped 3 MHz, 10 MHz and 30 MHz oscillations, are defined.
It can be learned from the formula in Equation (
1) that the phenomenon is an overlay of the fast transient and the damped oscillations of the serial circuit
with a natural frequency of
Parameters corresponding to 1 MHz slow damped oscillations presented in
Figure 3 are gathered in
Table 1. In the presented case,
ns. This corresponds to the bandwidth of the phenomenon
MHz. This is eight times bigger than natural frequency
.
Repetitive oscillations are generated due to multiple ignition and extinction of the short arc by closing the circuit breaker. The phenomenon is similar to “arc showering” described in [
11] or in [
12] and modeled numerically in [
13]. Repetition rate depends on the electrical parameters of the circuit shown in
Figure 1.
3. Measurement of Transient Fields Due to Closing of the MV Circuit Breaker
Electric and magnetic field strengths were measured in the control room by closing the MV circuit breaker. The current limiting inductors were dismounted from the circuit. The transformation ratio was set to 15 kV/0.2 kV. Only one transformer was powered, marked as No. L3 in
Figure 2.
The positions of probes are marked in
Figure 2. The measurements were performed in three orthogonal orientations of the probes, as in
Figure 2, which are named as follows:
Perpendicular to the wall separating the control room and the medium voltage area, see
Figure 5,
Along the wall separating the control room and the medium voltage area, see
Figure 6.
The measurement setup was built up with:
free space electric field sensor SFE3-5G with bandwidth from 100 kHz to 3.5 GHz,
free space magnetic field sensor SFM2G with bandwidth from 100 kHz to 2 GHz,
Digital oscilloscope WAVESURFER 3074 with 750 MHz analog bandwidth and 4 GS/s sampling rate, product of TELEDYNE LeCroy.
Both probes are products of MONTENA Technology SA. Integration was performed after the measurements with the script written in Matlab.
Low voltage of the transformer and one signal input of the controller were simultaneously recorded, as shown in
Figure 2. The transients recorder MEMORY HiCORDER 8861-50 with two channels plugged into ANALOGUE UNIT 8956 were used for these measurements. Both pieces of measurement equipment are products of HIOKI E.E. CORPORATION. HiCORDER 8861-50 has a maximum sampling rate of 20 MS/s. The analog unit also has a sampling rate of 20 MS/s when sampling simultaneously in two channels.
In
Table 2 and
Table 3, voltage and time parameters of the two stages of the interference, named the first and the second, are presented.
4. MV Circuit Breaker Tests in Stand-Alone Operation
For confirmation or exclusion that the repetitive damped oscillatory waves are due to the closing of the contacts of the circuit breaker, the MV Circuit Breaker was dismounted from the MV circuit and connected, as shown in
Figure 16. The tests were made with two types of electromotive forces EMF:
For the measurements in the first case, four low-voltage test probes Teledyne LeCroy PP022 with 500MHz bandwidth, 600 V range and 10:1 division were applied, see
Figure 17. The measurement results are presented in
Figure 18.
In the second case, four high-voltage probes P6015A—Tektronix—with 75 MHz bandwidth, 20 kV voltage range and 1000:1 division factor were used, see
Figure 19.
In both cases the four channels oscilloscope MSO 4054 Tektronix was used.
The damped oscillation by stand-alone operation are not observed neither by LV DC nor by MV AC supply, see
Figure 18 and
Figure 20.
The contacts in each phase do not close in the same instant, see
Figure 18. It generates a common mode component of the field.
5. Conclusions
Some of the conclusions were presented in [
2]. For the sake of completeness, they are repeated here.
It must be emphasized that measured field components do not concern the same event because the and probes are directional. The intensity of the transient phenomenon depends on how the instant of switching the MV circuit breaker is referred to the 0-crossing of the 50 Hz medium voltage source. This can be random from event to event.
The complexity of the phenomenon that accompanied the closing of the circuit breaker is overwhelming damped oscillatory waves, as defined in [
4]. They are distorted. Therefore, their bandwidth is much bigger than the standardized DOW.
Components of the electric field vertical and perpendicular to the separation wall reach several hundreds of V/m, which unambiguously extends levels allowed in the industrial environment, see
Figure 7 and
Figure 9. Corresponding magnetic field components reach merely several A/m, which is harmless even in a domestic environment, see
Figure 8 and
Figure 10.
The component of the electric field along the separation wall is slowly varying in time but is extremely high, see
Figure 11. It extends 100 kV/m. The magnetic field is also slowly varying in time and has a high peak value, reaching several hundreds of A/m, see
Figure 12.
The new conclusions from this paper are described below.
Experiments with the operation of the circuit breaker alone provided the answer that the repetitive damped oscillatory waves are not due to closing the contacts of the circuit breaker. The origin of it is rather a distributed line of the MV circuit along which the pulse is traveling and reflects at the transformer due to mismatching. This conclusion is in accordance with that presented in [
14].
The fact that the contacts do not close in the same instant, as observed by the stand-alone tests of the MV circuit breaker, can be another reason for repetitive oscillations.