Title :
Partial discharge location in high voltage transformers
Author :
Mohamed, R. ; Lewin, P.L.
Author_Institution :
Tony Davies High Voltage Lab., Univ. of Southampton, Southampton, UK
fDate :
May 31 2009-June 3 2009
Abstract :
Partial discharge (PD) location is a common problem within power transformers diagnostics and is important for assessing the severity of any detected fault. The technique presented in this paper is suitable for any type of discharge signal through determination of the predominantly capacitive operating region in the frequency domain of the transformer. Theoretically, any components signal in this frequency region will retain their waveshape and phase without significant attenuation. To obtain the predominantly capacitive region of a transformer winding, the relationship between the bushing terminal and neutral terminal has to be determined. In the predominantly capacitive region the two terminals will have a linear relationship in dB. To obtain the model of the transformer winding under test, it is injected at one end with a low voltage calibrated impulse to determine its initial parameters. Based on the measurement at the bushing and neutral terminals, the linear relationship of the two terminals is found by a fixed distribution equation derived from a lumped circuit parameter model. For verification, experiments within the laboratory have used various artificial PD signals injected at different points along a model winding to represent different PD sources. By considering the relative magnitude of a discharge signal at predominantly capacitive frequencies of the winding it is possible to evaluate the position of the discharge source.
Keywords :
partial discharges; potential transformers; power transformers; transformer windings; bushing terminal; fault detection; fixed distribution equation; frequency domain; high voltage transformer; lumped circuit parameter model; neutral terminal; partial discharge location; power transformers diagnostic; transformer winding; Attenuation; Circuit faults; Fault detection; Fault location; Frequency domain analysis; Insulators; Partial discharges; Power transformers; Voltage transformers; Windings;
Conference_Titel :
Electrical Insulation Conference, 2009. EIC 2009. IEEE
Conference_Location :
Montreal, QC
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-3915-7
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-3917-1
DOI :
10.1109/EIC.2009.5166345