DocumentCode
3033135
Title
Investigation of ground-fault protection devices for photovoltaic power system applications
Author
Bower, Ward ; Wiles, John
Author_Institution
Photovoltaics Syst. Applications, Sandia Nat. Labs., Albuquerque, NM, USA
fYear
2000
fDate
2000
Firstpage
1378
Lastpage
1383
Abstract
Photovoltaic (PV) power systems, like other electrical systems, may be subject to unexpected ground faults. Installed PV systems always have invisible elements other than those indicated by their electrical schematics. Stray inductance, capacitance and resistance are distributed throughout the system. Leakage currents associated with the PV modules, the interconnected array, wires, surge protection devices and conduit add up and can become large enough to look like a ground-fault. PV systems are frequently connected to other sources of power or energy storage such as batteries, standby generators, and the utility grid. This complex arrangement of distributed power and energy sources, distributed impedance and proximity to other sources of power requires sensing of ground faults and proper reaction by the ground-fault protection devices. The different DC grounding requirements (country to country) often add more confusion to the situation. This paper discusses the ground-fault issues associated with both the DC and AC side of PV systems and presents test results and operational impacts of backfeeding commercially available AC ground-fault protection devices under various modes of operation. Further, the measured effects of backfeeding the tripped ground-fault devices for periods of time comparable to anti-islanding allowances for utility interconnection of PV inverters in the United States are reported
Keywords
earthing; photovoltaic power systems; power system faults; power system interconnection; power system protection; solar cell arrays; surge protection; PV inverters; PV modules; USA; anti-islanding allowances; distributed impedance; distributed power sources; ground-fault protection devices; interconnected array; photovoltaic power system; stray capacitance; stray inductance; stray resistance; surge protection devices; utility interconnection; Capacitance; Electric resistance; Inductance; Leakage current; Photovoltaic systems; Power system faults; Power system interconnection; Power system protection; Solar power generation; Wires;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Photovoltaic Specialists Conference, 2000. Conference Record of the Twenty-Eighth IEEE
Conference_Location
Anchorage, AK
ISSN
0160-8371
Print_ISBN
0-7803-5772-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/PVSC.2000.916149
Filename
916149
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