DC LEAKAGE CURRENT DETECTOR AND METHOD OF OPERATION THEREOF FOR LEAKAGE CURRENT DETECTION IN DC POWER CIRCUITS
20180164362 ยท 2018-06-14
Inventors
- William James Premerlani (Scotia, NY)
- Ibrahima Ndiaye (Latham, NY, US)
- Kum-Kang Huh (Niskayuna, NY)
- Ahmed Elasser (Latham, NY, US)
Cpc classification
B60L53/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60L2270/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H02M1/32
ELECTRICITY
Y10S903/903
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
G01R31/52
PHYSICS
Y02T90/14
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y02T10/70
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
G01R31/08
PHYSICS
Y02T90/12
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y02T10/7072
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
G01R31/00
PHYSICS
Abstract
The DC leakage current detector for detecting leakage current in a DC bus includes a pair of transformers each comprising a magnetic core and excitation and detection windings would about the magnetic core, with the magnetic core positionable about a pair of conductors that create a magnetic field that is a sum of currents in the conductors. An excitation and biasing circuit is connected to the excitation winding in each transformer to inject a current signal thereto that creates a changing magnetic flux in the core of each transformer and a detector output connected to the detection winding in each transformer to receive a voltage therefrom generated responsive to the magnetic flux in the core of each transformer, wherein the voltage on the detection windings provides a net voltage at the detector output whose value is indicative of a presence of a leakage current on the DC bus.
Claims
1. A DC leakage current detector for detecting leakage current in a DC bus, the DC leakage current detector comprising: a pair of transformers, each of the pair of transformers including: a magnetic core comprising an opening positionable about a pair of conductors of the DC bus, the pair of conductors creating a magnetic field in the magnetic core that is a sum of currents in the conductors; and a pair of windings wound about the magnetic core, the pair of windings including an excitation winding and a detection winding; an excitation and biasing circuit connected to the excitation winding in each of the pair of transformers to inject a current signal thereto, the injected current signal creating a changing magnetic flux in the core of each of the transformers; and a detector output connected to the detection winding in each of the pair of transformers to receive a voltage therefrom generated responsive to the magnetic flux in the core of each of the transformers, wherein the voltage on the detection windings provides a net voltage at the detector output whose value is indicative of a presence of a leakage current on the DC bus.
2. The DC leakage current detector of claim 1 wherein the pair of transformers comprise normally unsaturated transformers, with the injected current signal creating the changing magnetic flux to partially saturate the magnetic cores of the transformers.
3. The DC leakage current detector of claim 2 wherein, when no leakage current is present in the conductors, the magnetic flux in the pair of transformers are equal and opposite from one another, such that the net voltage at the detector output is zero.
4. The DC leakage current detector claim 2 wherein, when leakage current is present in the conductors, the magnetic flux in the pair of transformers are unequal from one another, such that the net voltage at the detector output has a non-zero value.
5. The DC leakage current detector of claim 4 wherein, when leakage current is present in the conductors, the magnetic core of one of the pair of transformer is partially saturated for periods of time and the magnetic core of the other of the pair of transformers is unsaturated.
6. The DC leakage current detector of claim 1 wherein the pair of transformers comprise normally saturated transformers, with the injected current signal including a DC bias therein that maintains the pair of magnetic cores in saturation.
7. The DC leakage current detector of claim 4 wherein, when no leakage current is present in the conductors, the pair of magnetic cores remains in saturation, such that no net voltage is present at the detector output.
8. The DC leakage current detector of claim 4 wherein, when leakage current is present in the conductors, the leakage current counteracts the DC bias in the injected current signal for one of the pair of transformers, so as to cause the one of the pair of transformers to be taken out of saturation, such that the net voltage at the detector output has a non-zero value.
9. The DC leakage current detector of claim 6 wherein a magnitude of the DC bias in the injected current signal is controlled based on a known magnitude of leakage current that might be present in the pair of conductors, with the magnitude of the DC bias in the injected current signal being controlled such that the leakage current approximately counteracts the DC bias.
10. The DC leakage current detector of claim 1 wherein the injected current signal comprises a current signal having a sawtooth waveform shape.
11. The DC leakage current detector of claim 1 wherein a number of turns in the excitation winding on one of the pair of magnetic cores differs from a number of turns in the excitation winding on the other of the pair of magnetic cores.
12. A method of sensing a leakage current fault in a DC power circuit, the method comprising: positioning a DC leakage current detector about a pair of conductors of a DC bus in the DC power circuit, the DC leakage current detector comprising: a pair of transformers, each of the pair of transformers including: a magnetic core positioned about the pair of conductors; and a pair of windings wound about the magnetic core, the pair of windings including an excitation winding and a detection winding; an excitation and biasing circuit to inject a current signal onto the excitation winding of each transformer; and a detector output coupled to the detection winding of each transformer; causing the excitation and biasing circuit to inject the current signal onto the excitation winding of each transformer, thereby creating a changing magnetic flux in the core of each of the transformers; measuring a voltage on each of the detection windings generated responsive to the magnetic flux in the core of each of the transformers, with the voltage on the detection windings providing a net voltage at the detector output whose value is indicative of a presence of a leakage current on the DC bus.
13. The method of claim 12 wherein the pair of transformers comprise normally unsaturated transformers, and wherein causing the excitation and biasing circuit to inject the current signal comprises injecting the current signal to create a changing magnetic flux that partially saturates the pair of magnetic cores of the transformers.
14. The method of claim 13 wherein, when no leakage current is present in the conductors, the magnetic flux in the pair of transformers are equal and opposite from one another, such that the net voltage at the detector output is zero; and wherein, when leakage current is present in the conductors, the magnetic flux in the pair of transformers are unequal from one another, such that the net voltage at the detector output has a non-zero value.
15. The method of claim 12 wherein the pair of transformers comprise normally saturated transformers, and wherein causing the excitation and biasing circuit to inject the current signal comprises injecting a current signal that includes a DC bias therein that maintains the pair of magnetic cores in saturation.
16. The method of claim 15 wherein, when no leakage current is present in the conductors, the pair of magnetic cores remain in saturation, such that no net voltage is present at the detector output; and wherein, when leakage current is present in the conductors, the leakage current counteracts the DC bias in the injected current signal for one of the pair of transformers, so as to cause the one of the pair of transformers to be taken out of saturation, such that the net voltage at the detector output has a non-zero value.
17. The method of claim 15 wherein injecting the current signal that includes the DC bias comprises controlling a magnitude of the DC bias in the injected current signal based on a known magnitude of leakage current that might be present in the pair of conductors, with the magnitude of the DC bias in the injected current signal being controlled such that the leakage current approximately counteracts the DC bias.
18. A DC leakage current detection system for detecting a leakage current fault in a DC bus of a DC power circuit, the DC leakage current detection system comprising: a plurality of DC leakage current detectors for detecting leakage current in the DC bus at various locations in the DC power circuit, each of the DC leakage current detectors comprising: a pair of transformers, each of the pair of transformers including: a magnetic core comprising an opening positionable about a pair of conductors of the DC bus, the pair of conductors creating a magnetic field in the magnetic core that is a sum of currents in the conductors; and a pair of windings wound about the magnetic core, the pair of windings including an excitation winding and a detection winding; an excitation and biasing circuit connected to the excitation winding in each of the pair of transformers to inject a current signal thereto, the injected current signal creating a changing magnetic flux in the core of each of the transformers; and a detector output connected to the detection winding in each of the pair of transformers to receive a voltage therefrom generated responsive to the magnetic flux in the core of each of the transformers, wherein the voltage on the detection windings provides a net voltage reading at the detector output whose value is indicative of a presence of a leakage current on the DC bus; and a logic device operably connected with the plurality of DC leakage current detectors, the logic device configured to: receive the net voltage reading from each of the plurality of DC leakage current detectors; and locate the leakage current fault in the DC power circuit based on the net voltage readings received from the plurality of DC leakage current detectors.
19. The DC leakage current detection system of claim 18 wherein the pair of transformers in a respective DC leakage current detector comprise normally unsaturated transformers, with the injected current signal creating the changing magnetic flux to partially saturate the magnetic cores of the transformers; and wherein the net voltage reading at the detector output is zero when no leakage current is present in the conductors and the net voltage reading at the detector output is a non-zero value when leakage current is present in the conductors.
20. The DC leakage current detection system of claim 18 wherein the pair of transformers comprise normally saturated transformers, with the injected current signal including a DC bias therein that maintains the pair of magnetic cores in saturation; and wherein no net voltage reading is present at the detector output when no leakage current is present in the conductors and the net voltage reading at the detector output has a non-zero value when leakage current is present in the conductors.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0013] The drawings illustrate embodiments presently contemplated for carrying out the invention.
[0014] In the drawings:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0024] Embodiments of the invention are directed to construction of a DC leakage current detector that may be employed for leakage current detection and fault location identification in a DC power circuit in hybrid and electric vehicles. The DC leakage current detector includes a pair of transformers that act to generate a net output voltage on detection windings thereof that is indicative of the presence of a leakage current in conductors of the DC power circuit at a location being monitored by the DC leakage current detector.
[0025] While embodiments of the invention are described below as part of a plug-in electric vehicle implantation/embodiment, it is recognized that embodiments of the invention may also be incorporated into hybrid plug-in electric vehicles, non-plug-in electric vehicles, and other general DC power circuits with numerous branches (other than in a vehicle environment) where it is desirable to be able to identify the location of a current fault in the circuit. Thus, it is recognized that embodiments of the invention are not meant to be limited to plug-in electric vehicles or electric/hybrid vehicles in general, and that embodiments of the invention may be utilized with/in other general DC power circuits with numerous branches.
[0026] Referring to
[0027] As shown in
[0028] When plug-in electric vehicle 10 is parked or not in use, it may be desirable to plug the vehicle into, for example, the utility grid or to a renewable energy source to refresh or recharge the battery pack 16. Accordingly,
[0029] In one embodiment, an export power inverter 36 is also included in DC power circuit 12. The export inverter 36 may be provided that is able to invert power received from the DC distribution bus 22 of the vehicle and output an AC power that may be provided back to the utility grid or to another AC load that might require power. As shown in
[0030] For operating and controlling the various components of the DC power circuit 12 described above, one or more associated controllers 44 is included in the plug-in electric vehicle 10 to control and monitor the operation of the components. The controller(s) 44 may communicate via a serial bus (e.g., Controller Area Network (CAN)) or via discrete conductors, and a system controller 46 may be present to coordinate the operation of the various controllers 44 and their associated components.
[0031] As shown in
[0032] According to embodiments of the invention, a plurality of DC leakage current detectors 58 are placed throughout the DC power circuit 12 of vehicle 10 for detecting the presence of electrical isolation issues. The DC leakage current detectors 58 function to detect leakage current to the vehicle frame 54 that arises from a fault anywhere in the DC power circuit 12, and further function to locate the low leakage current faultwith operation of the DC leakage current detectors 58 enabling a determination of the path of the leakage current within the DC power circuit 12. More specifically, a DC leakage current detector 58 is positioned on each of a number of independent branches 60 of the DC bus 22 of DC power circuit 12, with each branch 60 including thereon a component of the DC power circuit 12 (e.g., battery pack 16, electrical machine 14, DC-AC inverter 24, DC-DC converter 26, battery charger 34, export inverter 36, etc.). In such a manner, each of the independent branches 60 of the DC bus 22 can be separately monitored to detect a leakage current therein.
[0033] An exemplary placement of the DC leakage current detectors 58 in/on the DC power circuit 12 is shown in
[0034] In general, any sort of sensor that can detect DC leakage current can be used as the DC leakage current detectors 58. However, according to an exemplary embodiment of the invention, the DC leakage current detector 58 is comprised of a pair of transformers, as will be described in greater detail hereafter with respect to
[0035] According to one embodiment of the invention, and as shown in
[0036] Upon injection of a current signal into the excitation winding 70 on each of the transformers 64, 66, a voltage is monitored on the detection winding 72 on each of the transformers 64, 66with the presence or absence of a voltage on the detection windings 72 indicating whether a leakage current is present on the conductors 18, 20 at the monitored location at which the DC leakage current detector 58 is positioned. That is, as long as there is no leakage current through the conductors 18, 20, the flux excursions in each of the cores 68 are equal and opposite. As a result, the voltages generated in each of the detection windings 72 are equal and opposite, and the net voltage at output 76 of the DC leakage current detector 58 is zero. However, the presence of leakage current on the conductors 18, 20 causes the symmetry between the flux waveforms in the two cores 68 to be broken. As a result, there will be brief periods when one core 68 is saturated and the other is not, which will produce a net voltage waveform on the detection windings 72 that is then output from the DC leakage current detector 58 at output 76. An example of such a net voltage waveform at output 76 that is indicative of a leakage current on the conductors 18, 20 is shown in
[0037] According to another embodiment of the invention, and as shown in
[0038] Upon injection of a current signal into the excitation winding 70 on each of the transformers 64, 66, a voltage is monitored on the detection winding 72 of each of the transformers 64, 66with the presence or absence of a voltage on the detection windings 72 indicating whether a leakage current is present on the conductors 18, 20 at the monitored location at which the DC leakage current detector 58 is positioned. In the unsaturated transformer embodiment of
[0039] With respect to the injection current signals generated by excitation/biasing circuit 74 that maintain the transformer cores 68 in saturation, it is recognized that since the amount of leakage current is determined by the sizes of the resistors 55, 56 in the DC power circuit 12 in
[0040] Thus, with regard to the saturated and unsaturated transformer constructions/operations shown and described in
[0041] Referring back now to
[0042] In the embodiment of
[0043] Beneficially, embodiments of the invention thus provide a DC leakage current detector that may be employed for leakage current detection and fault location identification in a DC power circuit in hybrid and electric vehicles. The DC leakage current detector includes a pair of transformers operable as unsaturated or saturated transformers to generate a net output voltage on detection windings thereof that is indicative of the presence of a leakage current in conductors of the DC power circuit at a location being monitored by the DC leakage current detector.
[0044] According to one embodiment of the invention, a DC leakage current detector for detecting leakage current in a DC bus is provided. The DC leakage current detector includes a pair of transformers each comprising a magnetic core having an opening positionable about a pair of conductors of the DC bus that create a magnetic field in the magnetic core that is a sum of currents in the conductors and a pair of windings wound about the magnetic core, the pair of windings including an excitation winding and a detection winding. The DC leakage current detector also includes an excitation and biasing circuit connected to the excitation winding in each of the pair of transformers to inject a current signal thereto that creates a changing magnetic flux in the core of each of the transformers and a detector output connected to the detection winding in each of the pair of transformers to receive a voltage therefrom generated responsive to the magnetic flux in the core of each of the transformers, wherein the voltage on the detection windings provides a net voltage at the detector output whose value is indicative of a presence of a leakage current on the DC bus.
[0045] In accordance with another embodiment of the invention, a method of sensing a leakage current fault in a DC power circuit includes positioning a DC leakage current detector about a pair of conductors of a DC bus in the DC power circuit, the DC leakage current detector comprising a pair of transformers, each of the pair of transformers including a magnetic core positioned about the pair of conductors and an excitation winding and a detection winding wound about the magnetic core, an excitation and biasing circuit to inject a current signal onto the excitation winding of each transformer, and a detector output coupled to the detection winding of each transformer. The method also includes causing the excitation and biasing circuit to inject the current signal onto the excitation winding of each transformer, thereby creating a changing magnetic flux in the core of each of the transformers. The method further includes measuring a voltage on each of the detection windings generated responsive to the magnetic flux in the core of each of the transformers, with the voltage on the detection windings providing a net voltage at the detector output whose value is indicative of a presence of a leakage current on the DC bus.
[0046] In accordance with yet another embodiment of the invention, a DC leakage current detection system for detecting a leakage current fault in a DC bus of a DC power circuit is provided. The DC leakage current detection system includes a plurality of DC leakage current detectors for detecting leakage current in the DC bus at various locations in the DC power circuit, each of the DC leakage current detectors comprises a pair of transformers each including a magnetic core having an opening positionable about a pair of conductors of the DC bus that create a magnetic field in the magnetic core that is a sum of currents in the conductors and a pair of windings wound about the magnetic core, the pair of windings including an excitation winding and a detection winding. Each of the DC leakage current detectors also includes an excitation and biasing circuit connected to the excitation winding in each of the pair of transformers to inject a current signal thereto, the injected current signal creating a changing magnetic flux in the core of each of the transformers. Each of the DC leakage current detectors further includes a detector output connected to the detection winding in each of the pair of transformers to receive a voltage therefrom generated responsive to the magnetic flux in the core of each of the transformers, wherein the voltage on the detection windings provides a net voltage reading at the detector output whose value is indicative of a presence of a leakage current on the DC bus. The DC leakage current detection system also includes a logic device operably connected with the plurality of DC leakage current detectors, the logic device configured to receive the net voltage reading from each of the plurality of DC leakage current detectors and locate the leakage current fault in the DC power circuit based on the net voltage readings received from the plurality of DC leakage current detectors.
[0047] While the invention has been described in detail in connection with only a limited number of embodiments, it should be readily understood that the invention is not limited to such disclosed embodiments. Rather, the invention can be modified to incorporate any number of variations, alterations, substitutions or equivalent arrangements not heretofore described, but which are commensurate with the spirit and scope of the invention. Additionally, while various embodiments of the invention have been described, it is to be understood that aspects of the invention may include only some of the described embodiments. Accordingly, the invention is not to be seen as limited by the foregoing description, but is only limited by the scope of the appended claims.