SURGE PROTECTION APPARATUS AND METHOD FOR SUBSTATION PROTECTIVE RELAYS

20220328216 ยท 2022-10-13

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    A surge protection apparatus is disclosed. The surge protection apparatus includes a housing; electronics contained in the housing; and a plurality of metal tabs electrically connected to the electronics, the metal tabs being configured to connect to a terminal block of a relay panel in a substation, the metal tabs electrically connecting the terminal block to the electronics to provide EMP surge protection to the relay panel

    Claims

    1. A surge protection apparatus, comprising: a housing; electronics contained in the housing; and a plurality of metal tabs electrically connected to the electronics, the metal tabs being configured to connect to a terminal block of a relay panel in a substation, the metal tabs electrically connecting the terminal block to the electronics to provide EMP surge protection to the relay panel.

    2. The surge protection apparatus of claim 1, wherein the electronics includes a plurality of channels, each respective channel being electrically connected to a respective one of the plurality of metal tabs.

    3. The surge protection apparatus of claim 2, wherein each respective channel includes a metal oxide varistor (MOV).

    4. The surge protection apparatus of claim 3, wherein the MOV includes an internal fuse.

    5. The surge protection apparatus of claim 1, wherein the surge protection apparatus includes four metal tabs and four channels, each metal tab being electrically connected to a respective channel.

    6. The surge protection apparatus of claim 2, wherein each respective channel includes a light emitting diode (LED) circuit to indicate that the surge protection apparatus is operational.

    7. The surge protection apparatus of claim 6, wherein the LED circuit includes two resistors and two LEDs.

    8. A terminal mounted electromagnetic pulse (EMP) transient voltage surge protection apparatus, comprising: a housing; electronics contained in the housing; and a plurality of metal tabs electrically connected to the electronics, the metal tabs being configured to connect to a terminal block of a relay panel in a substation, the metal tabs electrically connecting the terminal block to the electronics in parallel to provide EMP surge protection to the relay panel.

    9. The surge protection apparatus of claim 8, wherein the electronics includes a plurality of channels, each respective channel being electrically connected to a respective one of the plurality of metal tabs.

    10. The surge protection apparatus of claim 9, wherein each respective channel includes a metal oxide varistor (MOV).

    11. The surge protection apparatus of claim 10, wherein the MOV includes an internal fuse.

    12. The surge protection apparatus of claim 8, wherein the surge protection apparatus includes four metal tabs and four channels, each metal tab being electrically connected to a respective channel.

    13. The surge protection apparatus of claim 9, wherein each respective channel includes a light emitting diode (LED) circuit to indicate that the surge protection apparatus is operational.

    14. The surge protection apparatus of claim 13, wherein the LED circuit includes two resistors and two LEDs.

    15. A method of protecting relay panels in a substation from electromagnetic pulse (EMP) transient voltages, comprising the steps of: providing a surge protection apparatus having: a housing; electronics contained in the housing; and a plurality of metal tabs electrically connected to the electronics, the metal tabs being configured to connect to a terminal block of a relay panel in a substation, the metal tabs electrically connecting the terminal block to the electronics to provide EMP surge protection to the relay panel; and electrically connecting the surge protection apparatus to the terminal block of the relay panel in the substation.

    16. The method of claim 15, further including the step of connecting multiple surge protection apparatuses together so that multiple surge protection devices may be connected to a single terminal block.

    17. The method of claim 16, wherein the multiple surge protection apparatuses are connected together by connecting ground lugs of each of the multiple surge protection apparatuses together.

    18. The method of claim 15, further including the step of connecting a second surge protection apparatus to the surge protection apparatus, the second surge protection apparatus having a voltage handling capacity different than the surge protection apparatus.

    19. The method of claim 15, wherein the surge protection apparatus is electrically connected to the surge protection apparatus in parallel.

    20. The method of claim 15, wherein the step of electrically connecting the surge protection apparatus to the terminal block further includes the steps of sliding each of the plurality of metal tabs between a respective screw and the terminal block and using the respective screw to secure each of the plurality of metal tabs to the terminal block.

    Description

    BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

    [0014] The invention may be best understood by reference to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawing figures, in which:

    [0015] FIG. 1 shows an electromagnetic plane wave (E1 HEMP) coupling into an arbitrary conductor system, resulting in voltage and current transients;

    [0016] FIG. 2 shows example transient surge voltages generated by E1 HEMP;

    [0017] FIG. 3 illustrates MOV shunting of an incident voltage surge to ground;

    [0018] FIG. 4 shows a relay panel with terminal blocks where surge protection devices are needed;

    [0019] FIG. 5 shows an example of series connections associated with a surge protection device;

    [0020] FIG. 6 shows a modular surge protection device according to an embodiment of the invention;

    [0021] FIGS. 7-10 show electronics of the modular surge protection device of FIG. 6;

    [0022] FIG. 11 shows the modular surge protection device of FIG. 6 being installed on a terminal block of the relay panel of FIG. 4; and

    [0023] FIG. 12 shows a parallel connection of the modular surge protection device of FIG. 6.

    DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

    [0024] Surge protection of devices (not substation electronics) exposed to E1 HEMP surges has in the past been mitigated with the use of powerline filters. These powerline filters are connected in series between the cable and the device and are designed to block the transient signal. Such powerline filters are used to protect equipment connected to AC power circuits inside shielded enclosures (e.g., a desktop computer) and were never designed to protect low-voltage signal wires that are connected to digital protective relays. Because of the nature of power system protection and control circuits, series connected devices are not preferred.

    [0025] Referring to the drawings wherein identical reference numerals denote the same elements throughout the various views, FIGS. 6 and 7 illustrate a modular EMP surge protection device (E-SPD) 10. The E-SPD 10 includes a housing 12 housing and/or containing electronics 14 and a plurality of metal tabs 16 connected to the electronics 14 for connecting to a terminal block 18 (see FIG. 4) of a relay panel in a substation. The housing may be made of plastic or any other suitable material.

    [0026] As shown in FIGS. 7-10, E-SPD 10 includes four channels 20-23. Each respective channel 20-23 has a fuse 25, an MOV with internal fuse 26, an LED circuit 27 having two resistors 28 and 29 and two LEDs 30 and 31 (green or other suitable color). There is also a grounding lug 32 that provides a ground path for the MOVs 26 and LED circuits 27. Each channel 20-23 is connected to a respective one of the tabs 16.

    [0027] The MOVs 26 are used to shunt the incident voltage surge to ground. The fuses 25 are used to isolate the MOVs 26 from the connected circuit should they fail. Generally, the MOVs 26 fail shorted and so an MOV failure will create a short circuit to ground and could affect the operation of the protection and control system that it is connected to if the failed MOV is not automatically disconnected from the system. The LED circuit 27 is used to provide indication that the device is on-line and that the fuses 25 are not blown. When the LEDs 30 and 31 are lit, the system is operational, and when they are not, it indicates a problem has occurred.

    [0028] The design of the E-SPD 10 allows the E-SPD 10 to be installed onto terminal blocks already used for substation control wiring applications, FIG. 11. The tabs 16 are specifically designed such that the E-SPD 10 can be installed by loosening existing terminal block screws, sliding the tabs 16 between the screws and the terminal block 18, and retightening the screws to secure the E-SPD 10 to the terminal block 18. This approach saves time by eliminating the need to modify the terminal block 18.

    [0029] As shown, the tabs 16 are angled to allow the E-SPD 10 to be easily installed onto existing terminal blocks 18. For example, each of the tabs 16 include two bends 40 and 42 which divide each of the tabs 16 into three sections 44, 46, and 48. The bend 40 has an angle (section 44 relative to section 46) of approximately 43 degrees to about 47 degrees and more preferably of about 45 degrees. Bend 42 has an angle (section 46 relative to section 48) of approximately 45 degrees to about 47 degrees and more preferably of about 45 degrees. It should be appreciated that a single bend or other suitable number of bends may be used. Section 44 may have a length of about 0.6 cm to about 0.67 cm and more preferably about 0.635 cm; section 46 may have a length of about 0.98 cm to about 1.06 cm and more preferably about 1.02 cm; and section 48 may have a length of about 2.04 cm to about 2.12 cm and more preferably about 2.08 cm.

    [0030] As illustrated in FIG. 12, the E-SPD 10 is in parallel with the control wiring and, hence, it does not need to carry nominal load or fault currents that the wiring needs to withstand. The modularity of the E-SPD 10 allows multiple E-SPDs 10 to be connected together using the grounding lugs 32 of each E-SPD 10 so that multiple E-SPDs 10 can be used on a single terminal block 18. For example, 3 or 4 E-SPDs 10 may be connected together. Additionally, each of the connected multiple E-SPDs 10 may be designed for different voltage handling capabilities, for example, one might be designed for 120 volts and another for 69 volts. The grounding lug 32 on the circuit board is designed to be large so that it can accept a larger gauge wire, for example #10 AWG, to minimize the impedance to ground. For example, the ground lug 32 may be a 6-32 screw terminal (approximately 0.138 inches in diameter). This reduces the amount of surge voltage that propagates on to the protective device by reducing the transient voltage across the grounding system.

    [0031] The current invention is advantageous because it can be connected directly to a terminal block of existing relay panels in a substation. This is in stark contrast to other devices that are DIN rail mounted or rack mounted which are not capable of being directly connected to the terminal block. Additionally, protection from fast front surges such as those generated by E1 HEMP is limited by longer ground leads, such 100's of centimeters. Mounting the surge protection devices directly to the terminal block minimizes ground lead length, for example 10's of centimeters, and improves protection.

    [0032] The foregoing has described a surge protection apparatus and method. All of the features disclosed in this specification (including any accompanying claims, abstract and drawings), and/or all of the steps of any method or process so disclosed, may be combined in any combination, except combinations where at least some of such features and/or steps are mutually exclusive.

    [0033] Each feature disclosed in this specification (including any accompanying claims, abstract and drawings) may be replaced by alternative features serving the same, equivalent or similar purpose, unless expressly stated otherwise. Thus, unless expressly stated otherwise, each feature disclosed is one example only of a generic series of equivalent or similar features.

    [0034] The invention is not restricted to the details of the foregoing embodiment(s). The invention extends any novel one, or any novel combination, of the features disclosed in this specification (including any accompanying claims, abstract and drawings), or to any novel one, or any novel combination, of the steps of any method or process so disclosed.