A NEW TECHNIQUE FOR THE REMOTE PARTIAL DISCHARGE MONITORING OF THE STATOR INSULATION OF HIGH-VOLTAGE MOTORS LOCATED IN "Ex" (HAZARDOUS) LOCATIONS
A NEW TECHNIQUE FOR THE REMOTE PARTIAL DISCHARGE MONITORING OF THE STATOR INSULATION OF HIGH-VOLTAGE MOTORS LOCATED IN "Ex" (HAZARDOUS) LOCATIONS
A NEW TECHNIQUE FOR THE REMOTE PARTIAL DISCHARGE MONITORING OF THE STATOR INSULATION OF HIGH-VOLTAGE MOTORS LOCATED IN "Ex" (HAZARDOUS) LOCATIONS
Russell Armstrong
David Clark
Steven Goodfellow
Paul. S. Hamer
Member, IEEE
Managing Director
HVPD Ltd
Manchester, UK
[email protected]
PD Test Engineer
HVPD Ltd
Manchester, UK
[email protected]
Fellow IEEE
Senior Consulting Engineer
Chevron Energy Techn. Co
Richmond, CA, USA
[email protected]
I.
INTRODUCTION
The on-line partial discharge (OLPD) assessment of inservice high voltage (HV) plant is now becoming more
widespread in the oil and gas and petrochemical process
industries. Particular focus is made on the condition
assessment of the stator insulation of rotating high-voltage
motors which drive the critical processes. The on-line partial
discharge (PD) sensors, test and monitoring techniques
described in this paper have been applied to a wide range of
utility and industrial HV plant owners by the authors in test
projects from around the world over the past 15 years. Many
of these projects have been initiated following the
experience of an in-service HV insulation failure which has
resulted in loss of business revenue to the client. Partial
discharge testing of HV rotating machine stator windings has
been used to assess the condition of the stator insulation for
II.
III.
THE HISTORY OF PD TESTING OF
ROTATING HIGH VOLTAGE MACHINES
As stated in the introduction section of this paper, the
condition assessment of stator insulation using PD testing
has been used for over 50 years. Pioneering developments
in Canada/USA (using HV coupling capacitor (HVCC)
sensors, Resistive Temperature Detector (RTD) sensors
and Stator Slot Couplers (SSC) sensors) and in the
UK/Europe (using both HVCC and air-cored, Rogowski Coil
(RC) sensors) in the 1960s showed that it was possible to
make effective measurements of PD activity in the HV stator
windings of the machines [1]. Over the past 50 years, the PD
testing and monitoring of rotating machines has been
discussed by many authors as a key tool to understanding
the causes of stator insulation failure. Today, the continuous
monitoring of PD activity in rotating machines has now
become widely accepted as an effective method to identify
sites of localised damage or degradation ahead of scheduled
preventative maintenance outages.
Historically, periodic (typically annual) PD spot testing of
rotating machine stator insulation has been used to provide
long-term trending of PD activity. Whilst useful for the
detection of long-term insulation deterioration due to ageing,
these annual spot tests can sometimes fail to diagnose
certain load-related, environmental (temperature/humidity),
machine duty-cycle or seasonal-related insulation problems.
of HV cables and
Routine, regular walkby assessments o
rotating plant using simple, handheld PD
D test units.
Diagnostic PD testing and location o
of the PD site(s)
using portable diagnostic spot-test techn
nology.
Permanent monitoring of key substatio
ons, circuits and
rotating machines on the network to tre
end PD activities
with time/load cycle changes
TABLE I
PARTIAL DISCHARGE SEN
NSOR OPTIONS
PD Sensor Options
Sensor
High Voltage
Coupling
Capacitor
Ferrite-cored
High
Frequency
Current
Transformer
Transient
Earth
Voltage
Rogowski
Coil
Picture
Coupling
C
Method
Relative
Sensitivity
at 10 MHz
Capacitive
C
100
Inductive
I
30
Capacitive
C
Inductive
I
A.
Up to 2.5 km
TABLE II
PD LEVEL GUIDELINES FOR HV ROTATING MACHINES
Assessment
D.
PD Level (mV)
HVCC sensors
Excellent
< 2000
< 20
Good
2000 4000
20 40
Average
4000 10000
40 100
Still Acceptable
10000 15000
100 250
15000 25000
250 600
> 25000
> 600
Inspection
Recommended
Unreliable
PD Level (pC)
HFCT sensors
10,000
PD Magnitude (pC)
Machine PD
5,000
0
-5,000
-10,000
0
90
180
270
Phase of Pow er Cycle (deg)
Machine PD
360
90
180
270
Phase of Pow er Cycle (deg)
360
40,000
PD Magnitude (pC)
VII.
20,000
0
-20,000
-40,000
TABLE IV
PHASE-TO-PHASE PD PULSE PARAMETERS MEASURED AT
THE HV MOTOR AND SWITCHGEAR END OF THE FEEDER
Machine-End PD
Switchgear-End PD
Parameter
Measurements
Measurements
of PD
Phase
Phase
Pulse
L1
L2
L3
L1
L2
L3
Rise Time
88.2
24.9
50.4
198.3 214.8 192.5
(ns)
Fall Time
95.6
74.6
88.2
291.0 285.4 278.3
(ns)
Pulse
190
100
150
580
550
510
Width (ns)
Charge
20.48
3.97
19.65
10.05
1.62
9.66
(nC)
Amplitude
415.98 160.0 543.98
73.0
11.52 73.60
(mV)
Cal
Pulse
Injection
L1
L2
L3
L1
L2
L3
PD
Cal
Pulse
Injection
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
0.45
0.66
0.73
0.46
0.58
0.49
0.40
0.49
IV. CONCLUSION
The project has shown that it is possible to reliably detect the
PD signals emanating from the stator windings of the motors
located in the Ex zone using remotely located HFCT sensors
at the central switchboard. It is also proposed that the
individual pulse wave-shape analysis method described in
this paper allows for a much more detailed analysis of the
PD pulses emanating from the machines windings to be
made. Most crucially, this type of waveshape-based,
diagnostic measurement provides the ability to discriminate
between phase-to-phase PD (from the end windings of the
machine) and phase-to-earth PD (from the slot sections of
the machine). This has a significant bearing on the level of
maintenance required as the repair of slot insulation requires
removal of the rotor (a big job) whilst end-winding discharges
can be repaired in many cases with only having to remove
the motor end caps to clean and touch-up the end winding
insulation with stress-grading paint.
Partial Discharge diagnosis algorithms developed by the
authors over 15 years ago for PD testing cables,
transformers and switchgear, allowed a similar analysis to be
made for HV rotating machines. To better understand pulse
propagation, retention of energy and multiple reflections of
PD signals in rotating machines, the authors will continue to
carry out pulse injection tests and remote-end PD testing of
in-service HV motors and generators. Such tests provide an
understanding of how the machine construction and cable
geometry and affects pulse attenuation and distortion from
source to sensor. The accurate location of PD sites within a
rotating machine will be dependent upon the combined
knowledge of the propagation paths throughout the windings
and the application of suitable differential equations to
describe the pulse propagation process and ultimately locate
the source(s) of PD.
Developing relationships between the different sites of PD
activity within rotating machines, and the PD pulse signals at
different locations, is dependent upon having knowledge of
the frequency response of the PD sensor, and an
understanding of certain types of differential equations which
permit so-called travelling wave solutions. Such equations
REFERENCES
[1] G. C. Stone and J. Kapler, Stator Winding Monitoring,
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st
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VITA
Lee A. Renforth studied Electrical and Electronic
Engineering at the University of Manchester in the UK
between 1986 and 1990. He was sponsored throughout this
4-year industrially-linked course by BICC cables where he
received his first training in the testing of HV cables. He
graduated with a BSc, MEng degree in 1990 and went on to
study for a PhD in the field of high voltage insulation
breakdown under sponsorship by the National Grid
Company, the transmission network operator for the UK. He
was awarded his PhD in 1993 when his thesis on the topic of
the breakdown of high voltage insulation was published, also
at Manchester University. In 1994 he set-up a new
technology start-up company, IPEC Ltd, with other members
of Manchester Universitys Power Systems Group. He was
Managing Director at IPEC Ltd for 10 years from the
companys start-up before leaving to set-up HVPD Ltd in
2004. He is currently Managing Director of High Voltage
Partial Discharge (HVPD) Ltd of Manchester, England, UK
which has now established itself as one of the market
leaders in the growing field of on-line partial discharge test
and monitoring technology for high voltage plant, cables and
rotating machines. He oversees the relationships with
HVPD's customers and partners in more than 80 countries
worldwide whilst remaining involved in the companys R&D
activities in conjunction with Manchester University, UK.
Steven Goodfellow received an HND in Electrical &
Electronic Engineering in 2003 from Tameside College in
Manchester, achieving a distinction level in his final year
project, the study of HV full-bridge resonant power supply.
With 8 years electronics manufacture and field experience
working as a HV test engineer, previous projects have
ranged from LASER power supplies to HV Marx Generators.
Prior to joining HVPD in Jan 2009, he worked as an
electrical test engineer at AMTAC laboratories and since
joining HVPD, he has been focused on field trials of the
HVPDs range of PD monitoring technology. With over 1000
hours of at-site field test experience with HVPD, Steven
carried out the on-line test trials reported in this paper. He is
an offshore certified engineer and is a member of the HVPD
online field test team providing PD test services to industrial
customers worldwide.
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