Abstract :
Over the past decade, new requirements have been proposed and implemented for Fault Ride Through, including a proposed NERC standard that would impose fault ride through requirements on all generation. Most existing fault ride through curves are used in the wind industry. Some have some very unusual-looking trip characteristics that are polygonal in shape, rather than the characteristic rectangular trip curves customarily used by protection engineers. This paper will examine some of these trip characteristics, increasingly common in the wind turbine industry, and show how a rectangular characteristic can be used to satisfy a polygonal trip requirement. The use of common trip curves such as that proposed by NERC in PRC-024-1 may require some changes in generator plant design, as occurred in the wind industry, to insure that equipment is designed for low-voltage operation.
Keywords :
electricity supply industry; power apparatus; power generation faults; power generation reliability; wind power plants; wind turbines; NERC standard; North American Electric Reliability Council; PRC-024-1 standard; fault ride-through trip curve; generator plant design; low-voltage designed operation; polygonal shape; polygonal trip requirement; protection engineer; rectangular trip curve; unusual-looking trip characteristics; wind turbine industry; Circuit faults; Generators; Industries; Low voltage; Power system stability; Standards; Wind turbines; Fault Ride Through; Interconnection Requirements; Low Voltage Ride Through; Zero Voltage Ride Through; trip characteristics; wind park;