2020 Mid-Semester Assignment - Design of An Urban HV Distribution Network
2020 Mid-Semester Assignment - Design of An Urban HV Distribution Network
2020 Mid-Semester Assignment - Design of An Urban HV Distribution Network
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UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY – SCHOOL OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
ELEC 5204 POWER SYSTEMS ANALYSIS AND PROTECTION
Introduction
The objective of this assignment is to do the basic planning and protection design of the
sub-transmission and high voltage distribution network of a typical suburban “zone”
substation. It has been designed to tie in with system studies to be done on the Power
System Simulator in the Sir William Tyree (SWT) laboratory (the lab work will enable
you to confirm a number of the relay settings determined as part of this assignment).
The zone substation will be constructed in two stages: initially two 25 MVA 33/11kV
transformers supplying 8 outgoing 11kV feeders and ultimately three 25 MVA
transformers and 15 outgoing 11kV feeders. For sake of analysis, the supply area can be
assumed to be roughly circular and of uniform load (refer fig 1). Initial diversified load
density (i.e. the average electrical load on the network) will be 1.0 MVA/km2 and the
ultimate load density 2 MVA/km2.
On the basis of reliability, the substation always runs one of its transformers as a spare,
i.e. the design capacity of a 2 transformer substation is only the rating of one and that of a
3-transformer substation is the capacity of 2 transformers. No spare capacity is provided
at local distribution substations. The 11kV network is run as a “ring-main” system, where
any 2 feeders can carry the load of 3 (i.e. the design capacity of the cables is based on an
average load equal to 2/3 of the cable maximum rating). However, all the feeders in
practice do not hit peak load at the same time (not uniformly loaded) and a “diversity
factor” (DF) of 0.7 should be applied (definition is: DF = Total Substation Load/Sum of
individual feeder loads, i.e. zone substation load = 0.7 * individual feeder peak loads;
conversely an individual feeder peak load = zone sub load/no of feeders/0.7).
The distribution substations vary in size from “kiosk” types of 750 kVA to commercial
designs of 1500 kVA capacities. All the zone and distribution transformers are 3-phase,
delta-star types; delta on the HV, earthed star on the LV; the zone transformers may be
earthed via an earthing reactor. The substations and network are all three-phase, 50 Hz.
There are both differential and overcurrent relays on each side of zone substation
transformer, and overcurrent relays on each outgoing 11 kV feeder, and on the HV side of
each distribution substation. The zone substation transformers have 500:5 Amp CTs on
the 33kV side, and a choice of 1200:5, 1500:5 or 1800:5 on the 11kV side. The 11 kV
feeders have 400:5 Amp CTs and for the distribution transformers, there is a choice of
60:5, 80:5, 100:5 or 150:5 Amp CTs. The primary rating CTs on the 11kV side of the
zone substation transformers will be chosen to suit the differential protection and the
overcurrent relays will have the same CT ratio. All CT secondaries (and hence also all
overcurrent relays) will be 5 amps. You will have to specify the secondary current rating
on the 11 kV sides of the differential relays on each zone substation transformer.
System Diagrams
Supply area
11kV feeders
Distribution
substations
Zone
substation
Fig 1 -Idealised Diagram of Supply Area, for Initial (25 MVA, 8 feeder
development)
33 kV 33 kV sub-transmission line
F
Z1 = j0.25 p.u ; Z0 = j0.5 p.u.
132 kV Grid supply transformers in ||
Z = j0.048 p.u equivalent
33 kV
A A
A
(Final Stage) 33/11kV
Zone transformers
Z = j0.13 p.u each
Zn Zn
B B B
11 kV
C C C C
11 kV
Note: All impedances are shown in per unit on 100 MVA base.
Available 11 kV (underground) 3-phase cable sizes are 185 mm2, 240 mm2 and 300 mm2
aluminium. Cable impedances and ratings (in Amps) are shown in table 1. The
maximum voltage regulation permissible on the zone substation transformers is 10%
(assume purely inductive, on 0.9 lagging PF load), on the 11 kV distribution feeders it is
3% and on the distribution substation transformers 3.5%.
Choose the current pick-up and time dial settings. The current pick-up must be at least
120% of normal maximum feeder load or 150% of zone or distribution transformer
loading to allow for temporary overloads. In addition the setting must allow for
transformer inrush current (12 times full load for 0.01 second and 6 times for 0.1 second).
The distribution transformer HV setting must act as back-up for the low voltage side and
be able to detect LV arcing faults of 4000 Amps phase-neutral. The earth fault pick-up
settings are normally about 20% of the load current, but again relays must grade correctly.
Note carefully the impact of the delta-earthed star winding arrangement on all
transformers, and the impact that will have on single phase to earth faults on the LV side
of transformers when reflected to the HV side.
The standard IEC formula for the operating time of an overcurrent relay on “standard
inverse” characteristic is:-
A copy of the curve is attached (Fig 3). An Excel spreadsheet to calculate the relay times
and draw curves is also available, if desired.
As part of the analysis, you will have to consider faults on or near the zone substation
11kV bus-bar and also at the extremity of the 11 kV feeders. The overcurrent relays must
grade properly for these two fault conditions. When calculating faults, assume the
transformers are purely inductive and ignore the R component of cable impedances.
• Between the 11kV overcurrent and 33kV overcurrent on the zone substation
transformers, for faults on the zone substation 11 kV busbar, for both one and two
transformers in service (i.e. between relays ‘A’ and ‘B’),
• Between the 33kV overcurrent on the zone substation transformers, for faults on
the zone substation 33kV or 11 kV busbars and the overcurrent relay at the start of
the 33kV sub-transmission line (i.e. between relays ‘A’ and ‘F’),
• Between the 11kV feeder overcurrent and the overcurrent on the HV side of the
11kV/415 V distribution transformers, located at both the sending end and
extremity of each 11 kV distribution feeder (i.e. between relays ‘C’ and ‘D1/ D2’)
for faults both near the zone substation, or near the feeder extremities.
NB: At a given current multiple, operating time is proportional to the Time setting