Method and Apparatus for Precision Phasor Measurements Through a Medium-voltage Distribution Transformer

20170023627 ยท 2017-01-26

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Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

A means and method for measuring precise voltage phasors on medium-voltage alternating current (AC) distribution grids, using existing distribution transformers as voltage sensors. The errors introduced by the distribution transformers are minimized by taking into account the transformer's vector impedance, combined with measuring the transformer secondary current phasor. The invention includes a means and a method of measuring the distribution transformer's vector impedance.

Claims

1-9. (canceled)

10. An apparatus for measuring a phasor vector of a fundamental primary voltage applied to a primary winding of an alternating current transformer, said apparatus using only measurements on a secondary winding of the alternating current transformer, said fundamental primary voltage having a magnitude between 1,000 volts and 100,000 volts, said transformer having a fundamental secondary voltage magnitude less than 1,000 volts, said transformer having a transformer's effective ratio equal to the fundamental primary voltage magnitude divided by the fundamental secondary voltage magnitude; said secondary winding connected to a secondary load that draws a fundamental secondary current, said fundamental secondary current not being constant in time; said transformer having a transformer's fundamental vector impedance; said apparatus making a plurality of measurements of the fundamental secondary voltage and a plurality of simultaneous measurements of the fundamental secondary current, then using the plurality of measurements of the fundamental secondary current to calculate a plurality of phasor vectors of change in the secondary fundamental current, and using the plurality of measurements of the fundamental secondary voltage to calculate a plurality of phasor vectors of change in the secondary fundamental voltage, the plurality of phasor vectors of change in the secondary fundamental voltage being substantially simultaneous in time with the plurality of phasor vectors of change in the secondary fundamental current; said apparatus using an algorithm to calculate the transformer's fundamental vector impedance from the relationship between the plurality of phasor vectors of change in secondary fundamental current and the plurality of simultaneous phasor vectors of change in the secondary fundamental voltage; said apparatus producing a measurement of the phasor vector of the fundamental primary voltage by: measuring the phasor vector of the fundamental secondary voltage; measuring the phasor vector of the fundamental secondary current; calculating an adjusted phasor vector of the fundamental secondary voltage by vector-summing the measured phasor vector of the fundamental secondary voltage with the vector-product of the measured phasor vector of the fundamental secondary current and the transformer's fundamental vector impedance; producing a measurement of the phasor vector of the fundamental primary voltage by multiplying the adjusted phasor vector of the fundamental secondary voltage by the transformer's effective ratio.

10. The apparatus of claim 10 in which the algorithm to calculate the transformer's fundamental vector impedance from the plurality of phasor vectors of change in secondary fundamental current and the plurality of simultaneous phasor vectors of change in the secondary fundamental voltage has a minimum magnitude threshold for phasor vectors of change in the secondary fundamental current.

11. The apparatus of claim 11 in which the minimum magnitude threshold has a fixed value.

11. The apparatus of claim 11 in which the minimum magnitude threshold is determined by an algorithm that adapts the minimum magnitude threshold based on a history of measurements.

10. The apparatus of claim 10 in which the algorithm to calculate the transformer fundamental vector impedance from the plurality of phasor vectors of change in secondary fundamental current and the plurality of simultaneous phasor vectors of change in the secondary fundamental voltage comprises statistical correlation between change in secondary fundamental current and change in secondary fundamental voltage.

14. The apparatus of claim 14 in which statistical weighting is applied in such a way that changes in secondary fundamental current with larger magnitudes receive more weight.

Description

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

[0018] FIG. 1 is an illustration of the environment of the present invention.

[0019] FIG. 2 is a schematic view of the key elements of FIG. 1.

[0020] FIG. 3 is a view of one implementation of the present invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

[0021] Turning our attention to FIG. 1, we see distribution grid conductors 1 mechanically supported by a power pole 2. Mounted on the power pole 2 is a transformer 3. The transformer 3 could, for example, be a single-phase transformer having a ratio of 100:1 for converting 24 kilovolts on its primary winding to 240 volts on its secondary winding. The medium-voltage primary winding of the transformer 3 is connected through primary conductors 9 and a fuse 10 to the medium-voltage distribution grid conductors 1. The low-voltage secondary winding of the transformer 3 is connected through secondary conductors 4 to conductors 5 on a low-voltage distribution grid. In FIG. 1, we see an enclosure 6 for the present invention. The present invention, inside its enclosure 6, makes use of current sensors 7 on the secondary conductors 4, and also makes use of voltage sensing conductors 8, to make measurements of voltage phasors and current phasors on the low voltage secondary of transformer 3. These measured secondary voltage phasors and current phasors are used in the present invention to precisely determine the voltage phasors on the medium-voltage distribution grid conductors 1, as further described below.

[0022] Turning our attention now to FIG. 2, we see, in schematic form, many of the same elements that we saw in FIG. 1: distribution grid conductors 1, a transformer 3, primary conductors 9, a fuse 10, secondary conductors 4, conductors 5 on a low-voltage distribution grid, an enclosure 6 for the present invention, current sensors 7 on the secondary conductors 4, and voltage sensing conductors 8. We also see a Micro Synchrophasor Instrument 31, developed under the Department of Energy ARPA-E Award Number DE-AR0000340, which implements one possible embodiment of the present invention. The Micro Synchrophasor Instrument 31 has voltage inputs 35 with appropriate ratings for direct connection to the low-voltage secondary winding of the transformer 3, and has current inputs 34 with appropriate ratings for using current sensors 7 to measure the current flowing on the low-voltage secondary conductors 4.

[0023] Turning our attention now to FIG. 3, we see an illustration of a Micro Synchrophasor Instrument 31 which implements one possible embodiment of the present invention. (The hand 37 in the illustration is shown to visually indicate approximate scale, and does not play any part in the present invention.) The Micro Synchrophasor Instrument 31 incorporates a display 33 and communications means 36, both of which are useful but not critical to the present invention. The Micro Synchrophasor Instrument 31 also incorporates voltage inputs 35 for measuring the low-voltage phasors on the secondary winding of the transformer 3, current inputs 34 for measuring the current flowing on the secondary conductors through current sensors, and computing means 32 for implementing the algorithm of the present invention, which is further described below.

[0024] In the present invention, we use measurements on the secondary, low-voltage conductors of a distribution transformer to precisely determine the voltage phasors on the primary, medium-voltage distribution grid conductors, which is also the voltage on the primary of the transformer, using the method explained further below.

[0025] We begin by making voltage phasor measurements and current phasor measurements on the secondary, low-voltage conductors, using any precise method known in the art. Combining these secondary voltage phasor measurements and secondary current phasor measurements with the effective ratio of the transformer primary winding to the transformer secondary winding, which can be found on the transformer nameplate, we implement the following equation to determine the parameter we want to measure: the phasor vector of the fundamental voltage on the primary winding of the transformer.


{right arrow over (V)}.sub.primary=.sub.transformer.Math.({right arrow over (V)}.sub.secondary+({right arrow over (I)}.sub.secondary.Math.{right arrow over (Z)}.sub.transformer))

[0026] V.sub.primary is the phasor vector of the fundamental voltage on the primary winding of the transformer, which is the parameter of interest;

[0027] .sub.transformer is the effective ratio of the transformer primary winding to the transformer secondary winding;

[0028] V.sub.secondary is the measured phasor vector of the fundamental voltage on the secondary side of the transformer;

[0029] I.sub.secondary is the measured phasor vector of the fundamental current on the secondary side of the transformer; and

[0030] Z.sub.transformer is the fundamental vector impedance of the transformer, as further described below.

[0031] Note that this equation requires that we know the fundamental vector impedance of the transformer.

[0032] In our invention, we measure the fundamental vector impedance of the transformer by observing the changes in our secondary voltage phasor measurements that occur simultaneously with changes in our secondary current phasor measurements. We approximate the relationship between those two measurements and the fundamental vector impedance of the transformer as follows:

[00001] Z .fwdarw. transformer .Math. .Math. V .fwdarw. secondary .Math. .Math. I .fwdarw. secondary

[0033] V.sub.secondary is the measured phasor vector of a change in fundamental voltage on the secondary side of the transformer, and

[0034] I.sub.secondary is the measured phasor vector of a change in fundamental current on the secondary side of the transformer.

[0035] As shown in this equation, the fundamental vector impedance Z.sub.transformer can be approximated by analyzing the measured vector change in secondary voltage that occurs approximately simultaneously with a detected vector change in the measurement of secondary current. It is an approximation of the fundamental vector impedance Z.sub.transformer for two reasons. First, the measured fundamental vector impedance is, in fact, the vector impedance of the transformer summed with the vector impedance of the grid that is upstream of the transformer primary; however, we have determined by experiment that the transformer vector impedance is almost always at least an order of magnitude larger than the upstream grid's vector impedance. Second, there can be changes in measured phasor vector of the fundamental voltage on the secondary side of the transformer that are caused by external factors other than changes in the phasor vector in the fundamental current on the secondary side of the transformer, such external factors including voltage sags on the primary, transformer tap changes, and other well-known events that affect transformer secondary voltage.

[0036] To minimize the effect of these kinds of external factors, in our invention the approximation of the fundamental vector impedance Z.sub.transformer may be calculated directly as described above, or it may be further refined using one or more of the following three methods: [0037] Threshold: For the purposes of calculating Z.sub.transformer, changes in V.sub.secondary are ignored unless they occur simultaneously with a change in I.sub.secondary that exceeds some threshold in vector magnitude, or exceeds some threshold in some parameter associated with the current phasor such as its real component or its imaginary component. This threshold may be fixed, or it may be determined by an algorithm that adapts this threshold to a history of measurements. [0038] Statistical correlation: For the purposes of calculating Z.sub.transformer, which is in the present invention is approximated by a ratio, a statistical correlation may be used to calculate the most likely ratio between a large number of measured changes in I.sub.secondary and a change in V.sub.secondary. For example, the slope of a linear least-squares fit could be used; or a statistical process that gives more weight to points that have a large change in current phasor could be used; or any other statistical method known to those familiar with the art could be used to extract an optimal ratio from a collection of I.sub.secondary and V.sub.secondary pairs. [0039] Intentional change in secondary current vector: the present invention relies on changes in I.sub.secondary, which almost always naturally occur in distribution transformer loads. In one implementation of the present invention, a measurement of Z.sub.transformer can be made by intentionally adding and removing load from the secondary of the distribution transformer. In another embodiment, the adding and removing are done in a timed pattern that permits extraction of relatively small signals from background noise using methods well-known in the art, such as fixed-frequency adding and removing combined with Fourier analysis; or random adding and removing combined with auto-correlation.

[0040] It will be apparent to one of ordinary skill that the above description, which assumes a single-phase system, can be readily extended to three-phase systems.

[0041] While the foregoing written description of the invention enables one of ordinary skill to make and use what is considered presently to be the best mode thereof, those of ordinary skill will understand and appreciate the existence of variations, combinations, and equivalents of the specific embodiment, method, and examples herein. The invention should therefore not be limited by the above described embodiment, method, and examples, but by all embodiments and methods within the scope and spirit of the invention.