DEVICE, SYSTEM, AND METHOD FOR HIGH VOLTAGE SWITCH
20240071699 ยท 2024-02-29
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01H33/66207
ELECTRICITY
H01H33/66261
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
Devices, systems, and methods are provided for a high voltage switch. The device can include a first housing, a switch, and a polymer insulating material. The housing can be at ground potential. The switch can be located within the housing and can include a current-breaking component and a moving contact. The current-breaking component can include a fixed contact and an opening contact. The fixed contact can be coupled to a first power lead. The opening contact can be configured to receive a moving contact. The moving contact can be coupled to a second power lead and can be controlled by an actuating mechanism. The polymer insulating material can surround the switch within the housing.
Claims
1. A device comprising: a first housing, wherein the housing is at ground potential; a switch, wherein the switch is located within the housing and comprises: a current-breaking component with a fixed contact and an opening contact, wherein the fixed contact is coupled to a first power lead and wherein the opening contact is configured to receive a moving contact, and the moving contact, wherein the moving contact is coupled to a second power lead and is controlled by an actuating mechanism; and a polymer insulating material, wherein the polymer insulating material surrounds the switch within the housing.
2. The device of claim 1, wherein the current-breaking component comprises a vacuum interrupter controlled by the actuating mechanism.
3. The device of claim 1, further comprising: a grounded shield, wherein the grounded shield surrounds at least the current-breaking component; and an air gap between the polymer insulating material and the grounded shield, wherein the polymer insulating material is coupled to an outer surface of the current-breaking component.
4. The device of claim 3, further comprising: a high voltage dielectric shield surrounding the fixed contact and opening contact of the current-breaking component.
5. The device of claim 3, wherein the polymer insulating material is void free.
6. The device of claim 3, wherein the polymer insulating material comprises liquid silicone rubber.
7. The device of claim 3, wherein the air gap comprises an atmospheric pressure air gap.
8. The device of claim 1, wherein the switch comprises a circuit breaker configured to protect electrical equipment from overcurrent.
9. A system comprising: a first housing, wherein the housing is at ground potential; a first bushing coupled to a first power lead; a second bushing coupled to a second power lead; a switch, wherein the switch is located within the first housing and comprises: a current-breaking component with a fixed contact and an opening contact, wherein the fixed contact is coupled to the first power lead through the first bushing, and wherein the opening contact is configured to receive a moving contact, and the moving contact, wherein the moving contact is coupled to a second power lead through the second bushing and is controlled by an actuating mechanism; and a polymer insulating material, wherein the polymer insulating material surrounds the switch and the moving contact within the first housing.
10. The system of claim 9, wherein the second bushing comprises a second housing at ground potential.
11. The system of claim 10, wherein the second housing comprises a polymer insulating material connected to its inner walls.
12. The system of claim 11, wherein the second bushing comprises a flange configured to separate the second housing from the first housing.
13. The system of claim 12, wherein the second bushing comprises a polymer insulating connecting point configured to insulate a connection between the second housing and the first housing.
14. The system of claim 9, wherein the current-breaking component comprises a vacuum interrupter controlled by the actuating mechanism.
15. The system of claim 9, further comprising: a grounded shield, wherein the grounded shield surrounds at least the current-breaking component; and an air gap between the polymer insulating material and the grounded shield, wherein the polymer insulating material is coupled to an outer surface of the current-breaking component.
16. The system of claim 15, further comprising: a high voltage dielectric shield surrounding the fixed contact and opening contact of the current-breaking component.
17. The system of claim 9, wherein the polymer insulating material comprises liquid silicone rubber.
18. The system of claim 9, wherein the first and second housing comprise the polymer insulating material.
19. A method, comprising: providing a high voltage electrical current through a grounded housing, wherein the grounded housing comprises: a first and second power lead coupled to a power supply, a switch comprising: a current-breaking component with a fixed contact and an opening contact, wherein the fixed contact is coupled to the first power lead and wherein the opening contact is configured to receive a moving contact, and the moving contact, wherein the moving contact is coupled to the second power lead and is controlled by an actuating mechanism, and a polymer insulating material, wherein the polymer insulating material surrounds the switch and the moving contact within the housing, and determining an overcurrent occurs between the first and second power lead; and switching off the high voltage electrical current using the switch.
20. The method of claim 19, wherein the current-breaking component comprises a vacuum interrupter controlled by the actuating mechanism and wherein the polymer insulating material comprises liquid silicone rubber.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0032] The benefits and advantages of the present embodiments will become more readily apparent to those of ordinary skill in the relevant art after reviewing the following detailed description and accompanying drawings, wherein:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0045] While the present disclosure is susceptible of embodiment in various forms, there is shown in the drawings and will hereinafter be described presently preferred embodiments with the understanding that the present disclosure is to be considered an exemplification and is not intended to limit the disclosure to the specific embodiments illustrated. The words a or an are to be taken to include both the singular and the plural. Conversely, any reference to plural items shall, where appropriate, include the singular. The words first, second, third, and the like may be used in the present disclosure to describe various information, such information should not be limited to these words. These words are only used to distinguish one category of information from another. The directional words top, bottom, up, down, front, back, and the like are used for purposes of illustration and as such, are not limiting. Depending on the context, the word if as used herein may be interpreted as when or upon or in response to determining.
[0046] The present disclosure relates to a high-voltage switch. The high-voltage switch can be a high-voltage circuit breaker that cuts off current when overcurrent occurs. In similar embodiments, the present disclosure includes high-voltage circuit breakers, high-voltage bushings, high-voltage to air interface in a grounded housing and methods for manufacturing these high-performance components.
[0047] In an embodiment, a high-voltage vacuum circuit breaker (HVVCB) can include a solid insulation that is free of insulating and arcing gasses. The dead tank (grounded housing) style high voltage circuit breaker is the most popular in North America. The grounded housing allows the installation of bushing current transformers at the base of each bushing, a necessary component for the utility substation relay and protection scheme. The mechanism can be capable of independent pole operation.
[0048] In an embodiment, the HVVCB may include an encapsulation of a vacuum interrupter with solid insulation in a conductive grounded housing.
[0049] In some embodiments, due to the use of a grounded housing, a novel process of molding is utilized. In this case the grounded housing can be the outside of the mold, and the actual mold tooling can be attached to the ends of the assembly to shape the insulators as they interface with the air.
[0050] Another embodiment can include a high voltage circuit breaker bushing with solid insulation. Another embodiment can include an air insulated, low pressure, connection from the mechanism to the interrupter.
[0051] According to embodiments presented herein, a solid polymer insulation system or polymer insulating material can be used between the vacuum interrupter and the high-voltage current carrying parts to the grounded tank. A vacuum interrupter can have the full high-voltage electrical capabilities required of a circuit breaker on the inside of the vacuum chamber. On the other hand, the outside of the vacuum interrupter does not have the required electrical properties to withstand the high voltages in air. Therefore, a vacuum interrupter used in a circuit breaker must have an insulation system around it that reduces the electric field strength in the air.
[0052] Currently, for outdoor equipment, high-voltage circuit breakers use insulating gas in aluminum tanks while medium-voltage breakers cast polymers over the vacuum interrupter without the grounded aluminum housing. According to embodiments presented herein, the solid insulation can be casted around the vacuum interrupter while in a grounded aluminum housing.
[0053] Embodiment presented herein can contain the electrical fields in a grounded conductive housing with a solid insulation system to control the electric field strength. The dielectric strength of polymers can be eight times greater than air, therefore the grounded housing can be able to have a diameter less than half the diameter of the traditional gas tanks. The vacuum interrupter can be located in the center of the housing and the space between the interrupter and the housing can be filled with a void free solid insulation, such as, for example a polymer insulating material. In an embodiment, the dielectric strength of air can be 3 kV/mm at standard temperature and pressure (STP). The dielectric strength of the polymer can be 23 kV/mm. The ratio is 23/3=7.7. To increase the performance of the air, manufacturers can increase the pressure to approximately 5 atmospheres. This can reduce the required diameter of the air pressure vessel.
[0054] Selecting a proper solid polymer insulation can be particularly important. Generally, for optimal operation, the insulation should be void free, have rubber like properties to work with the expansion and contraction of the materials in the assembly and be useable for the line to ground insulation bushing. According to embodiments presented herein, the insulation materials can be an electrical grade castable silicone rubber and/or urethane.
[0055] On the moving side of the vacuum bottle, near the moving contact 24 (
[0056] Each interrupter pole can have its own mechanism for the O-CO (open, close-open) operation. The choice of the independent pole operating mechanism can allow for a compatibility with synchronous operating controllers for capacitor switching, reactor switching and specialized transformer switching. The present disclosure can also be modified to use a common gang style operating mechanism.
[0057] Currently, for low to medium voltage systems, it is common to insulate vacuum interrupters in urethane, silicone or epoxy in a dead tank. The design approach according to embodiments presented herein is similar to the Shielded Encapsulated Vacuum Interrupter patent (Martin, 2005). One key difference includes the use of a different solid insulation together with a grounded housing for a high-voltage system, which can present unique challenges from the standpoint of manufacturing and system operation. More particularly, the solid insulation may require void free manufacturing and the system may require the ability to contain and operate under high heat. The grounded housing can make a material difference in the performance and size and can enable use as a high-voltage circuit breaker using solid insulation.
[0058]
[0059] The polymer insulation material 22 can be liquid silicone rubber. The polymer insulating material 22 can be coupled to the interior walls of the housing 23, 40 and/or the outer surface of the vacuum interrupter 20 and conductors 30, 42. It can surround the interrupter 20 and the moving conductor 24. According to embodiments presented herein, the polymer insulating material 22 can further surround the sliding operating rod 26 and taper near an outer end of the housing.
[0060] The first bushing 14 can include the first conductor 30 that couples the fixed contact 36 to a first power lead 18 (or first bushing top cap that connects to the first power lead). The second bushing 16 can include the second conductor 42 that couples the moving contact 25 to the second power lead 19 (or second bushing top cap that connects to a second power lead). According to embodiments shown schematically in
[0061] According to embodiments presented herein, the design 10 can be part of a high-voltage circuit breaker that is activated when there is an over-current detected. In one embodiment, the actuating mechanism 28 can be activated to disconnect the moving contact 24. In another embodiment, the design 10 can be part of a high-voltage switch that is activated by a user or other device. In such an embodiment, the actuating mechanism 28 can be activated to connect or disconnect the moving contact 24.
[0062] According to embodiments presented herein, the polymer 22 can include electrical grade silicone rubber, silicone rubber foams, urethanes, urethane foams, epoxies, epoxy foams, or a blend of these materials. The urethanes and epoxies can include rigid, semi flexible, or flexible with or without insert fillers. The polymer 22 can further include liquid castable thermoset plastics that cure after mixing with heat or room temperature. The polymer 22 can have a high dielectric strength with a low dielectric constant, it can be void free and able to bond well to metal surfaces with or without primer. Additionally, the polymer material 22 can be low cost, easy to process large castings, flame retardant and have low shrinkage.
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[0065] In an embodiment, the separable bushing can include no air insulation and instead a polymer, for example, approximately 20 mm in thickness between the current conductor and the grounded housing.
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[0070] According to embodiments shown schematically in
[0071] According to embodiments presented herein, it may be advantageous to insulate the high voltage from ground potential. This can be accomplished by carefully designing the dielectric control surface and atmospheric pressure air gap. An advantage of the present disclosure is that it can operate to eliminate the need for gas in circuit breakers at 72 kV and 145 kV. With costs lower than existing designs.
[0072] Sulfur hexafluoride (SF.sub.6) is a highly potent greenhouse gas that is used in the electric utility industry. In 1999 the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) established the SF6 Emission Reduction Partnership for Electric Power Systems with the EPA and electric power industry to reduce SF.sub.6 emissions.
[0073] For approximately ten years Hitachi/Meiden has offered an SF.sub.6 free circuit breaker at 72 kV (and now offers a 145 kV breaker) with a vacuum interrupter with air insulation (VI/air). The industry has been slow to accept this technology reaching less than a 10% market share over the ten years it has been available. This means that with an estimated 2000 total units sold per year, approximately 1800 of them would have SF.sub.6.
[0074] There are several apparent issues that have slowed the acceptance of the new VI/air technology:
[0075] VI/air has a higher cost and selling price than existing SF.sub.6 breakers. The dielectric strength of SF.sub.6 is about 2.5 times higher than that of air under the same conditions. Therefore, when SF.sub.6 is replaced with air as the insulating medium, the gas tanks must be larger and support higher pressures than the present technology SF.sub.6 tanks. Such modifications would expectedly increase the cost of the pressurized cast aluminum gas tanks.
[0076] VI/air has the same operational risks associated with leaking gas as SF.sub.6. Both systems must be sealed and monitored for gas leaks.
[0077] Utilities have large quantities of existing SF.sub.6 breakers for the foreseeable future at 145 kV, 245 kV, 362 kV, 550 kV and 800 kV. Therefore, these new VI/air breakers will have a small impact on the quantity of SF.sub.6 at the utility.
[0078] In the various embodiments, a method is utilized to inject the polymer into the space between the vacuum interrupter and high voltage conductors and the grounded housing. This can include casting of the vacuum interrupters (VI) in the grounded housing with associated tooling. Resin Systems has the vacuum mixing, vacuum molding and specialized curing equipment and experience to make these products. As with any new design, special tooling can be used for this casting.
[0079] According to embodiments presented herein, a separable bushing with conductor and insulator with gas insulation can be used with a solid insulation. The operating mechanism can be coupled to the moving side of the vacuum interrupter while the interrupter can be in the grounded housing.
[0080] The polymer in this system can be void free or minimized to avoid the problems associated with partial discharge. Partial discharge is a phenomenon where small voids or cavities in the insulating materials are stressed by the electric fields in the circuit breaker. When an insulating material experiences partial discharge, i.e., the electric field strength becomes too high for the void, an arc initiates across the void and starts to burn the insulation. These arcs can quickly grow to cause the insulation systems to fail. This has traditionally been a concern and challenge with using solid insulation. To mitigate the risks of partial discharge by the electric fields, the manufacturing process for the solid insulation can include vacuum mixing and vacuum molding. To ensure the quality of the manufacturing of the insulation, partial discharge testing can be used.
[0081] To ensure the electric field strength is kept within the capabilities of the air and solid insulation the design can be modeled by computer simulations.
[0082]
[0083] The polymer 114 can be the polymer insulating material described above. The polymer insulating material can be liquid silicone rubber. The polymer insulating material 114 can be coupled to the interior walls of the housing 110 and/or the outer surface of the current-breaking component 116 and conductors 30, 42. It can surround the switch 112, including the interrupter 116 and the moving contact 118. According to embodiments presented herein, the polymer insulating material 114 can further surround the sliding operating rod 138. As shown schematically in
[0084] The high-voltage switch can further include a first bushing 130 and second bushing 132. The first bushing 130 can include the first conductor 134 that couples the fixed contact 120 to a first power lead 124 (or first bushing top cap that connects to the first power lead). The second bushing 132 can include the second conductor 136 that couples the moving contact 118 to the second power lead 126 (or second bushing top cap that connects to a second power lead). According to embodiments shown schematically in
[0085] According to embodiments presented herein, the switch 112 can be part of a high-voltage circuit breaker that is activated when there is an over-current detected. In one embodiment, the actuating mechanism 128 can be activated to disconnect the moving contact 118 from the opening contact 122. In another embodiment, the switch 112 can be part of a high-voltage switch that is activated by a user or other device. In such an embodiment, the actuating mechanism 128 can be activated to connect or disconnect the moving contact 118 to or from the opening contact 122.
[0086] According to embodiments presented herein, the polymer 114 can include electrical grade silicone rubber, silicone rubber foams, urethanes, urethane foams, epoxies, epoxy foams, or a blend of these materials. The urethanes and epoxies can include rigid, semi flexible, or flexible with or without insert fillers. The polymer 114 can further include liquid castable thermoset plastics that cure after mixing with heat or room temperature. The polymer 114 can have a high dielectric strength with a low dielectric constant, it can be void free and able to bond well to metal surfaces with or without primer. Additionally, the polymer material 114 can be low cost, easy to process large castings, flame retardant and have low shrinkage.
[0087]
[0088] In an embodiment, vacuum interrupters may include a dielectric shield to protect the brazing/welding at the end of the vacuum interrupter. The dielectric field strength may be too high for air at standard temperature and pressure (STP). The polymer may protect the shield and vacuum interrupter from high dielectric fields.
[0089] In an embodiment, covering the vacuum interrupter body in polymer may allow for protecting the vacuum interrupter from high dielectric field strength on the surfaces since the polymer may have a dielectric strength about 7 times greater than air at STP. The polymer may also reduce the strength of the dielectric field on the surface of the polymer to a value that the air can withstand.
[0090] In another embodiment, air pressurized can be used at less than 1 atm, to avoid entanglements in ASME pressure vessel code. Additionally, a vacuum can be used.
[0091] In an embodiment, many gases can be used to replace air. Nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide or others can be used instead of air. In such a case, the containers must be sealed. In an embodiment, air can be used with a filtered vent to avoid full sealing of the device.
[0092] In an embodiment, the air gap 234 can be approximately a 150 mm distance between ground shield 232 and the interrupter 216 to allow the electric field lines to form the proper shape. In an embodiment, the ground shield 232 can be approximately 7 inches from the surface of the interrupter 216.
[0093] In an embodiment, the polymer insulating material can be connected to the housing or vacuum interrupter, for example, just prior to molding the adhesion surfaces can be sandblasted and coated with a proprietary primer. This combination can be used to activate the surfaces to enhance the bond between the polymer and the surfaces. The molding process can be performed by vacuum mixing of the polymer and vacuum mold filling to avoid air bubbles that will cause electric field problems. Depending upon which polymer is selected, the cure of the polymer will be either a room temperature cure or a heated cure in an oven.
[0094] In an embodiment, the bushings can be made out of a polymer insulating material casing where no insulating air is needed and therefore no monitoring of gas pressure to maintain dielectric properties. The polymer can perform as a solid insulation replacing the pressurized air of other designs. The polymer can be approximately 20 mm thick and provide all of the insulation necessary to provide dielectric strength for all of the ANSI requirements for circuit breakers and overall switch designs.
[0095] In an embodiment, the current carrying conductor can be aluminum or copper and can be filled with air at STP or can be sealed and evacuated. For the polymer in the bushing, a mold can be made over the conductor and a primer can be used as a coating before vacuum molding. The bushing can have a cast aluminum grounded housing that allows the installation and insulation of the bushing current transformer.
[0096] In an embodiment, the actuating mechanism 238 can be an EPS magnetic latch mechanism.
[0097]
[0098] In an embodiment, the separable polymer to polymer silicone joint can be connected under vacuum to keep air out of the joint.
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[0100] Competitive Considerations
[0101] For 50 years the state of the art in high voltage circuit breakers has been SF.sub.6 for interruption and insulation performance. Currently, the new state of the art in SF.sub.6 free high voltage circuit breakers consists of a vacuum interrupter in a dead tank configuration with air insulation. Meiden America Switchgear offers the MAS 7242 and MAS 7243 products. Siemens Energy has recently offered the 3AV1 Blue 72.5 kV, 3AV1 Blue 123 kV and 3AV1 Blue 145 kV with clean air insulation. Mitsubishi Electric Power Products, Inc. is offering the 72 kV Vacuum Circuit Breaker with air insulation. This design requires two different pressures per tank with a total of 6 gages. All of these companies are foreign companies with a heavy reliance on China for critical components.
[0102] Traditionally, a 72.5 kV SF.sub.6 dead tank circuit breaker with bushing current transformers sells for $32,000 (before the supply chain crisis). Today the 72.5 kV air insulated vacuum interrupter dead tank breakers sell for a premium above the price of the SF.sub.6 breakers. This premium price has limited utility acceptance. The new product will cost less and more importantly, can sell for 5 to 10% less than either of the existing SF.sub.6 or vacuum/air products, helping to drive the acceptance of this product.
[0103] The transition from the grounded tank to the air insulated bushing through to the high voltage in air terminal must be designed, developed and tested to withstand the dielectric challenges.
[0104] From the foregoing it will be observed that numerous modifications and variations can be effectuated without departing from the true spirit and scope of the novel concepts of the present disclosure. It is to be understood that no limitation with respect to the specific embodiments illustrated is intended or should be inferred. The disclosure is intended to cover by the appended claims all such modifications as fall within the scope of the claims.