METHOD OF MONITORING PARTIAL DISCHARGES IN A HIGH VOLTAGE ELECTRIC MACHINE, AND CONNECTION CABLE THEREFORE

20180356457 ยท 2018-12-13

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    Partial discharges in a high voltage electric machine can be monitored by a partial discharge monitor connected to the high voltage electric machine successively via a capacitive coupler and a connection cable. The connection cable can have a conductive element designed to self-destruct in the presence of electric current amplitude significantly exceeding expected current amplitudes from said partial discharges, and having diameter designed to avoid creation of additional partial discharges within the cable itself. The connection cable can be light enough to avoid adding excessive weight to the stator windings.

    Claims

    1. A method of monitoring partial discharges in a high voltage electric machine, the method comprising: connecting a partial discharge monitor to the high voltage electric machine successively via a capacitive coupler and a connection cable, said connection cable having a conductive element designed to self-destruct in the presence of a current amplitude significantly exceeding expected current amplitudes from said partial discharges, and having a diameter designed to avoid self-creation of additional partial discharges within the cable itself; and monitoring said partial discharges via said connection cable.

    2. The method of claim 1 wherein said monitoring said partial discharges via said connection cable includes allowing electrical current amplitude of below 1 Ampere across the connection cable.

    3. A connection cable having a conductor element surrounded by a jacket, the conductor element having a cross-section area designed to self-destruct in the presence of a critical current amplitude, the critical current amplitude significantly exceeding expected current amplitudes from partial discharges of a high voltage electric machine, and a diameter sufficient to avoid significant partial discharges within the cable itself.

    4. The connection cable of claim 3 wherein the conductor element is provided in the form of a tubular member made of a conductive material, and is filled by a cylindrical support member made of a non-conductive material.

    5. The connection cable of claim 3 wherein the conductor element is provided in the form of a cylindrical member made of a semi-conductive material.

    6. The connection cable of claim 3 wherein the critical current amplitude is above 100 milli-Amperes.

    7. The connection cable of claim 3 wherein the critical current amplitude is above 1 Ampere.

    8. The connection cable of claim 3 wherein the diameter of the conductor element is of at least 6 mm.

    9. The connection cable of claim 8 wherein the diameter of the conductor element if of at least 7 mm.

    10. The connection cable of claim 8 wherein the diameter of the conductor element is of at least 8 mm.

    11. The connection cable of claim 3 wherein the linear weight is of below the linear weight of a HV 200c/15 kV/AMG 2 cable.

    12. The connection cable of claim 3 wherein the jacket provides an insulation of above 20 kV.

    Description

    DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES

    [0016] In the figures,

    [0017] FIG. 1 is a schematic view of a partial discharge monitor connected to monitor partial discharges of a high voltage electrical machine;

    [0018] FIG. 2 is an oblique, sectioned view of a connecting cable in accordance with the prior art;

    [0019] FIG. 3 is an oblique, sectioned view of a first embodiment of a connecting cable;

    [0020] FIG. 4 is an oblique, sectioned view of a second embodiment of a connecting cable; and

    [0021] FIG. 5 is an oblique, sectioned view of a third embodiment of a connecting cable.

    DETAILED DESCRIPTION

    [0022] In many commonly used high voltage partial discharge couplers, the capacitance of the capacitor is 80 picofarads, the impedance is around 33 mega-ohms at 60 Hz and 40 mega-ohms at 50 Hz. The current then allowed by it is a maximum of 0.5 milli-Ampere. As frequencies increase, impedance decreases to 100 ohms at 20 MHz and 10 ohms at 200 MHz. At those very high frequencies that are of interest for partial discharge monitoring, impedance is low but the power of those high frequency signals is so weak that it is negligible compared to the main power of the machine.

    [0023] Nonetheless, using a relatively large diameter of the conductor can minimize creation of additional partial discharges from the connecting cable, which could represent undesired noise to the monitor.

    [0024] Partial discharge monitoring applications typically operate at voltages in the range of 15 kV to 24 kV. In such applications, the minimum diameter of the conductive or semi-conductive part should be at least comparable to the diameter of cable HV 200c/15 kV/AWG #2 3 feet cable (i.e. greater or equal to about 6.5 mm diameter) to avoid undesired partial discharge creation by the cable itself. In one embodiment, an improved cable can have lighter material (hollow design with smaller cross-sectional area of conductor or lighter-weight semi-conductor material), a 10 to 30% bigger diameter of the core (i.e. 7-8.5 mm), and add 20% to the jacket thickness.

    [0025] In the case of partial discharge analysis of an electric machine operating at voltage higher than 25 kV; the minimal diameter of the conductive or semi-conductive part can be obtained using the electrostatic formula for a cylindrical charged conductor nearby a grounded plane surface keeping in mind the ionisation level of 3 kV/cm. As earlier mentioned, the lighter material for the new invention allows meeting for higher voltage specifications.

    [0026] Referring to FIG. 3, the first example of a connecting cable 28 is presented. Connecting cable 28 is a cable with a conductor 4 having a very small diameter that tolerates a given current amplitude threshold, surrounded by a filler 5 and a large jacket insulation 6. The advantage of such configuration is that the conductor 4 can act as a fuse itself and self-destruct should the current amplitude threshold be exceeded. In the case of partial discharge monitoring, the given current amplitude threshold can be set below 1 Ampere, such as at 100 milli-Amperes for instance. Accordingly, no current having an intensity of several thousands of Amperes can be conveyed through the cable, thereby achieving the goal of protecting the partial discharge monitor from such large amplitude currents. However, the main drawback of this configuration is that the small diameter of conductor 4 may lead to partial discharge creation by the cable itself, a source of noise which could complicate or even prevent satisfactory partial discharge analysis.

    [0027] Referring now to FIG. 4, a second example connecting cable 30 is presented. The proposed connecting cable 30 has an insulated core 7 surrounded by a tubular, thin-walled conducting envelope 8, itself surrounded by filler 9 and an insulated jacket 10. Conducting envelope 8 is designed to allow no more than the given electrical intensity threshold. It was found that this configuration could further eliminates the drawback of additional partial discharge creation, since the conductor diameter can technically be made the same or perhaps even larger than in the prior art cable configuration shown in FIG. 2.

    [0028] Referring now to FIG. 5 a third example connecting cable 32 is presented. The proposed connecting cable consists of a semi-conductor 11, surrounded by filler 12 and jacket insulation 13. The diameter of the semi-conductor 11 is the same as or larger than in the FIG. 2 configuration. The composition of semi-conductor 11 is designed to self-destruct if the given electrical intensity threshold is exceeded.

    [0029] Preferably, the connecting cables of FIG. 4 or FIG. 5 are designed to add not more than tens of Ohms of impedance to the whole partial discharge measuring circuit by the proposed configurations, and the additional impedance will thus be negligible, especially in the context of partial discharge analysis based on trend analysis. Moreover, preferably, the measuring circuitry is not changed.

    [0030] As can be understood, the examples described above and illustrated are intended to be exemplary only. The scope is indicated by the appended claims.