Title :
Simulation and Experimental Investigation of DC Ice-Melting Process on an Iced Conductor
Author :
Jiang, Xingliang ; Fan, Songhai ; Zhang, Zhijin ; Sun, Caixin ; Shu, Lichun
Author_Institution :
State Key Lab. of Power Transm. Equip. & Syst. Security & New Technol., Chongqing Univ., Chongqing, China
fDate :
4/1/2010 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Ice melting with dc is one of the key technologies to prevent the Chinese power grid from ice storms. Especially after the severe ice storm in the southern part of China in early 2008, dc ice-melting technology has drawn more attention than ever before. However, there are few satisfactory methods to select correct parameters so the ice-melting project rarely achieves desired effects in some cases when applied in Hunan, Guizhou, and other provinces in China. Therefore, it is of great significance to develop a method to estimate parameters which is applicable in the practical situation for dc ice melting. To handle this, the factors, such as wind velocity, ambient temperature, current density and ice-layer thickness were analyzed and then a dc ice-melting model is put forward in this paper. Both the results of simulations and experiments show that the ice-melting process can be divided into three stages composed of temperature rising, ice melting, and ice shedding, among which the ice melting is the key stage consuming most of the ice-melting time. In this stage, an elliptic airgap is formed and widened gradually with an influence on the ice-melting time and the temperature of the conductor. The experiments in the artificial climate chamber demonstrate that the results of the presented model are consistent with those of the experiments generally, so it can be employed to estimate the parameters of ice melting in practical engineering as reference.
Keywords :
ice; parameter estimation; power grids; power overhead lines; Chinese power grid; DC ice-melting process; Guizhou; Hunan; ambient temperature; current density; ice shedding; ice storms; ice-layer thickness; iced conductor; parameters estimation; power transmission lines; temperature rising; wind velocity; Conductors; Current density; Ice; Parameter estimation; Power grids; Power transmission lines; Storms; Temperature; Thermal conductivity; Wind speed; Ice melting; ice storm; ice-melting time; transmission line;
Journal_Title :
Power Delivery, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TPWRD.2009.2037632