Power Cable Engineering
Power Cable Engineering
POWER CABLE
ENGINEERING
BY:
JAIME A. DERECHO III
Power Substation Design Engineer
Overhead Power Line Design Engineer
Underground Distribution Design Engineer
Objectives:
V. Current Challenges
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
OF ELECTRICAL CABLE
TIMELINE: the 19th Century
1812: insulated conductor was used to detonate ores in mine under Neva River by
Baron Schilling
(insulation: India Rubber)
1816: earliest experiment with an underground cable was made by Francis Ronalds for
telegraph lines
(insulation: cotton saturated with shellac in a glass tube and placed in a wooden trough)
1837: first underground line along the railroad of London for the 5 wire telegraphy
(insulation: cotton saturated in rosin installed in separate grooves in a piece of timber)
1880: Edison planned his first distribution of energy for lighting New York City from a centrally
located DC-Generating Station
(insulation: jute)
1890: the first line insulated with paper was installed by Ferranti between Deptford and London
for single-phase at 10,000 volts. The system operated successfully for 43 years.
(insulation: wide strips of paper saturated with a rosin based oil)
TIMELINE: the 20th Century
1927: patent by Fisher and Atkinson revealed that the dielectirc strength of
impregnated paper is greater.
(insulation: paper from Manila-Rope fiber wrapped helically around the conductor
heated, vacuum dried, impregnated with an insulating fluid)
1959: Dr. Frank Percopio patented a new type of insulation but was not widely used because
of the tremendous pressure to keep the cost down near the the cost of overhead line.
(insulation: Cross-linked polyethylene)
“0” Voltage or
(Ground)
- Ampacity
- Voltage Stress
- Voltage Regulation
- Conductor Losses
- Bending Radius and flexibility
- Overall Economics
- Material Consideration
- Mechanical Properties
1. CONDUCTOR
STRANDING
ELECTRICAL RESISTANCE
Skin Effect
Proximity Effect
2. CONDUCTOR SHIELD OR SCREEN
Market
- Polyethylene
- Polypropylene
MOLECULAR BOND/STRUCTURE
Advantages:
– Higher ampacity
– Lower losses
Disadvantage:
– Sheath isolation joints are required
– Voltage on sheath / safety concerns
MULTIPLE-POINT GROUNDING
Advantages:
– No sheath isolation joints
– No voltage on the shield
– No periodic testing is needed
– No concerns when testing or looking for faults
Disadvantage:
– Lower Ampacity
– Higher losses
5. JACKETS