Practical 01 Introduction To Protection
Practical 01 Introduction To Protection
rating of the equipment, the repelling forces generated due to this large current would reshape
and destruct the whole equipment structurally. This is called electrodynamic damage.
Abnormalities
During certain situations, a power system behaves abnormally. Some of these abnormalities in a
generator are unbalanced loading, field failure, overloading, overvoltage, prime-mover failure,
pole-slipping, etc. A transformer may behave abnormally due to over-heating or over-fluxing. An
induction motor can run abnormally due to under voltage, overloading, unbalanced loading,
stalling, etc.
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The auxiliary
relay
is
provided for
two
main
reasons.
Firstly, if the
protective
relay contact
is required to carry a high trip coil current, it will be required to be sturdy enough
and hence the weight of the moving system of the protective relay will increase.
This will reduce its sensitivity. Hence, a protective relay is reserved for only
sensing the fault and the auxiliary relay contact does the function of carrying the
high trip coil current. Secondly, many other functions such as annunciations,
alarms, inter locks, etc., are required to be performed when the relay operates.
This requires many contacts to be simultaneously operated. A multi contact
auxiliary relay does these functions.
On operation of the auxiliary relay, the trip coil of a circuit breaker is energized
and the breaker trips. Thus the faulty section is isolated from the rest of the
healthy system.
The following definitions include terminology and nomenclature in common use in the
relay industry. They have been compiled using information from the IEEE and the
National Association of Relay Manufacturers. In instances where different terms are
used synonymously, one has been defined and others have been cross-referenced to it.
When the phrase "sometimes used for" is employed, a preference is implied for the
terminology following the phrase, when "same as" is used; no strong preference is
inferred.
All-or-nothing relay. - An electrical relay, which is intended to be energized by a
quantity whose value is either, higher than that at which it picks up or lower than
that at which it drops out.
Ampere-Turns. -The product of the number of turns in a magnetic coil and the
rms current in amperes passing through the coil.
Armature. - Hinged or pivoted moving part of the magnetic circuit of an
electromagnetic relay. Sometimes used in a general sense to means any moving
part which actuates contacts in response to a change in coil current.
Armature Contact. - Sometimes used for Movable Contact.
Armature Relay. - A relay operated by an electromagnet which, when energized,
causes an armature to be attracted to a fixed pole (or poles).
Auxiliary Relay. - A relay, which operates in response to opening and closing of
its operating circuit to assist another relay or device in performance of a function.
for example a measuring relay, for the purpose of providing higher rated contacts
or introducing a time delay.
Backstop. - The part of a relay, which limits movement of the armature away from
the pole piece or core.
Power System Protection - 170903