Response of Power System Protective Relays to...
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Response of Power System Protective Relays to Solar and HEMP MHD-E3 GIC
Andrew K. Mattei, Baylor University Brazos Electric Cooperative
Dr. W. Mack Grady, Baylor University
Texas A&M Conference for Protective Relay Engineers, 2019
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Outline
• Introduction to the phenomenon• Solar Storms• High Altitude Nuclear Bursts• The Magnetosphere and the
Electric Field• Solar vs. HEMP GIC
• The Waveforms of DC Injection• Waveform 1: Test Bench Data• Waveform 2: NERC Example• Waveform 3: DTRA Field Test Data
• Harmonic Distortion and Currents• Time-Overcurrent Relay Testing
and Results• Differential Relay Testing and
Results• Detection and (Possible)
Mitigation of GIC Interference
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Solar Storms
https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/?IDNumber=PIA03149
• Coronal Mass Ejection (CME) events send large quantities of magnetized gas into space
• If the ejection occurs on the proper trajectory, these particles may disturb the Earth’s magnetosphere
• NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center https://www.swpc.noaa.gov
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High Altitude Nuclear Burst
• >30 km above the Earth’s surface, up to several hundred km
• Thin atmosphere allows wide spread of gamma particles, whose collisions facilitate the ionization of the more dense atmospheric layer below
• The ionization and subsequent fireball rise from atmospheric heating result in distinct periods of slow-moving electric fields – “Blast” and “Heave”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:SunBurst10.jpg – modified version ofhttps://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Robot_Arm_Over_Earth_with_Sunburst_-_GPN-2000-001097.jpg
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Characteristics of a High-Altitude
Nuclear EMP Burst
• E1 – Fast, strong EMP (nsec rise, 10’s of nsec in duration)
• E2 – Not quite as strong, slower (lightning-esque), ~1 sec
• E3 – separated into E3A “Blast” and E3B “Heave”, 300 seconds in duration
Source: Gilbert et.al., [3]
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HEMP Footprint
• Pictured, altitude of 150 km• Affected area depends on
altitude, weapon design, and Earth’s field state
Source: Gilbert et.al., [3]
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The Magnetosphere of the Earth
• Earth’s orbit distorts the magnetic fields
• Asymmetrical field lines between daylight and night sides
• Creates natural areas for common solar disturbance / Auroras (poles)
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Structure_of_the_magnetosphere-en.svg
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Electric Fields• Slow disturbance of geomagnetic
field lines result in slow-moving electric fields
• Elevated V/km fields, coupled with low impedance lines with ground connections at either end (GY transformers) forms a loop
• Loop allows for quasi-DC flow
Photo by Matthias Cooper from Pexels
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Solar GIC Event vs. Single HEMP Event
• Solar events can be hours or days in duration, but of lower magnitude (8-12 V/km for NERC Reference and Supplemental events per TPL-007-2)
• 10-second data points in upper graph, 11,200 points total
• MHD-E3 event lasts 300-400 seconds (single burst)• Stronger electric fields (10-50 V/km) – possible
thousand+ amps per phase• Either may result in hot-spots in transformers, cap
bank / SVC protection operations due to harmonics, relay mis-operations
Rackliffe, Crouse, Legro, Kruse “Simulation of Geomagnetic Currents Induced in a Power System by Magnetohydrodynamic Electromagnetic Pulses”, IEEE Transactions on Power Delivery, Vol. 3, No. 1, January 1988.
Derived from NERC Reference Event based on custom calculation.
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What are we going to see with DC in the system?• IEEE Std C57.163-2015: IEEE Guide
for Establishing Power Transformer Capability while under Geomagnetic Disturbances
• The Late-Time (E3) High-Altitude Electromagnetic Pulse (HEMP) and Its Impact on the U.S. Power Grid –Metatech, 2010.
Source: IEEE Std C57.163-2015 [6]
Source: Gilbert et.al., [3]
Source: IEEE Std C57.163-2015 [6]
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Baylor Test Lab – DC Injection Test Bench
• Single-phase and Three-Phase transformers
• Data acquisition everywhere (all phases of V & I, including neutrals) with NI / LabView
• Capable of 8+ Amps DC injection from batteries
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Test Bench Waveform• “Waveform 1” - ~38% Second
Harmonic• Matches expectations based on
IEEE and Metatech documents• Baylor source has elevated third
harmonic• Turn it in to a COMTRADE file for
relay testing
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Somebody say COMTRADE?
Source: NERC [10]
NERC 1989 Event Document (among TPL-007 documents), Figure 15 – “Waveform 2”
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DTRA DC Injection Test Bed @ Idaho National Labs
“Waveform 3”
Source: [11]
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In a Normal World (50 or 60 Hz)
𝐼𝐼𝑅𝑅𝑅𝑅𝑅𝑅 ≅ 𝐼𝐼𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝑅𝑅𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹 ≅ 𝐼𝐼𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝑅𝑅𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹 ≅𝐼𝐼𝑃𝑃𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝑃𝑃
2
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In a Distorted World
Test IRMS IFILTERED/FUNDAMENTAL IPEAK÷√2Waveform 1 10.25 9.06 17.37Waveform 2 10.25 5.03 16.79Waveform 3 10.25 9.46 12.81
DC 0mA 6.73 6.70 6.24DC 40mA 6.93 6.85 6.75DC 68mA 7.31 7.13 8.26DC 107mA 8.18 7.72 11.48
𝐼𝐼𝑅𝑅𝑅𝑅𝑅𝑅 ≇ 𝐼𝐼𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝑅𝑅𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹 ≇𝐼𝐼𝑃𝑃𝐹𝐹𝐹𝐹𝑃𝑃
2
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3 Time-overcurrent relays tested
Waveform10.25A RMS THD CO9
Time (s)IAC53BTime (s)
SEL421Time (s)
1 53% 3.08 2.445 3.5872 177.5% 4.994 2.281 480+3 41.8% 2.738 2.425 3.2
Westinghouse CO-9GE IAC-53BSEL-421• All set to same pickup / time dial - obviously curves / times will be different
between them• The Question: Can we predict EM relay operation based on RMS current?
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Waveform 1 – Varying RMS Magnitude
• Concern becomes unpredictable behavior near pick-up point when compared to fundamental component
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Differential Relay Testing (Simplified)
Westinghouse HU, GE STD, GE BDD, SEL-487E
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Test 1 (baseline): Does relay trip for loss of secondary
side current?
• All current flowing into primary side winding when secondary current drops out
• Of course it trips, as it should. All relays tested - tripped.
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Test 2: Does relay trip during Waveform 1
on Primary winding?
• Drop secondary current again, just like Test 1
• None of the tested relays tripped. Second harmonic blocking / restraint inhibits tripping.
• Unrestrained tripping (instantaneous) is not affected. Relay will still trip on high current levels.
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Observations• Time-overcurrent protection can become a bit unpredictable with
harmonics. Even though relays may feature similar construction (induction-disc), the way they handle harmonics may be different.
• With a microprocessor-based relay, severe harmonics (Waveform 2) may not result in protection activating even though peak current is well above pickup (operating only on fundamental).
• Differential relays may not operate during GIC events until the instantaneous pickup is reached. This may slow tripping and result in more damage than a ‘fast trip’.
• Two types of relays? That’s all you’ve got?
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Selection - So what relays do we focus on?
• Overheard within ERCOT: How do we know what relays to look at? Where can we start?
• Start with the TPL-007-2 GIC model for the Benchmark Event.• Evaluate the higher-magnitude GIC flows within your area of
responsibility.• Determine transformers, capacitor banks, and SVC’s near the
elevated-GIC area.• Examine the protection on those devices. Run some harmonic-
laced COMTRADE files if necessary.
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Detection – When is it happening?• Borrowing from Zweigle, Pope, & Whitehead
[12] – use relays to measure harmonics and feed back via SCADA or synchrophasor.
• Upper graph – September 7, 2017, shell form autotransformer. G3 event. No increase in second harmonic found. 2nd, 4th, 5th harmonic being logged every minute – have over 3 years of data. No coincidental GIC harmonics ever found (here in Texas).
• Lower graph – Two seconds of synchrophasordata based on each waveform from Baylor Test Bench (varying DC injection levels). Second harmonic percentage of Operate Current. A good indicator that something is ‘happening’ in the grid.
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Mitigation – what can relays do?
• Harmonic detection can send alarms to System Operators so that mitigating actions can be taken.
• Use a timer on second harmonic blocking pick-up. If duration is greater than 120 cycles (or ?), assert an alarm to SCADA.
• Plan ahead with alternate settings groups for high-impact areas. Consider reduced safety margin to keep equipment – especially reactive equipment – in service. Transformers in deep saturation absorb VARs and cap banks / SVCs become very important for stability.
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Conclusion
• EM relays may be unpredictable. Examine the GIC model and determine impacted areas. In these areas, strongly consider replacing EM relays with uP.
• Be considerate with uP relays and harmonic distortion. Will distortion be greater than the fundamental (like Waveform 2)?
• Consider alarming on long-duration harmonic pickup. This will alert System Operator that differential protection may be disabled, or a time-overcurrent element may not have enough fundamental to assert.
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Concern Areas that Need Testing
• Electromechanical Negative-Sequence Protection• Voltage waveforms are different than current waveforms –
EM cap bank protection• Looking for relays…
• FFT’s for waveforms are included in appendix of paper. COMTRADE files for everyone…
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Questions
Look for me during the conference –comments and suggestions for research are appreciated!
Thank you to Gene Corpuz @ LCRA and Mark Chronister @ Oncor for letting us borrow EM relays, to Brazos Electric Cooperative for the test lab, Schweitzer Engineering Labs for their support, and to the Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA) for data, questions, and funding the research. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:SunBurst10.jpg – modified version of
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Robot_Arm_Over_Earth_with_Sunburst_-_GPN-2000-001097.jpg