Shunt Capacitor Bank Fundamentals and Protection (Presentatio
Shunt Capacitor Bank Fundamentals and Protection (Presentatio
Shunt Capacitor Bank Fundamentals and Protection (Presentatio
FUNDAMENTALS AND
PROTECTION
Submitted by ;
Sandeep kerketta
Roll no.-0301101087
Electrical engineering
OVERVIEW
(1) Introduction
(2) Configurations
(3) Design
(4) Operation
(5) Protection
(6) Conclusions
INTRODUCTION
1.
2.
3.
4.
Advantages
1. Improvement of the voltage at the load.
2. voltage regulation.
3. reduction of losses
4. Maximize system capacity
Disadvantages
1.
2.
Bank Configurations
1. The use of fuses for protecting the capacitor units and it location is
an important subject in the design of SCBs.
2. They also affect the failure mode of the capacitor unit and
influence the design of the bank protection.
3.
Externally Fused
1. An individual fuse, externally mounted between the capacitor unit and the
capacitor bank fuse bus, typically protects each capacitor unit.
2. The capacitor unit can be designed for a relatively high voltage because
the external fuse is capable of interrupting a high-voltage fault.
3. A failure of a capacitor element welds the foils together and short circuits
the other capacitor elements connected in parallel in the same group.
4. The remaining capacitor elements in the unit remain in service with a
higher voltage across them than before the failure and an increased in
capacitor unit current.
5. If a second element fails the process repeats itself resulting in an even
higher voltage for the remaining elements.
6. Successive failures within the same unit will make the fuse to operate,
disconnecting capacitor unit and indicating the failed one.
Internally Fused
1. Each capacitor element is fused inside the capacitor unit.
2. . Upon a capacitor element failure, the fuse removes the affected element
only. The other elements, connected in parallel in the same group, remain
in service but with a slightly higher voltage across them.
3.. Banks employing internally fused capacitor units are configured with
fewer capacitor units in parallel and more series groups of units
than are used in banks employing externally fused capacitor units
When a capacitor bank unit fails, other capacitors in the same parallel
group contain some amount of charge. This charge will drain off as a high
frequency transient current that flows through the failed capacitor unit and
its fuse. The fuse holder and the failed capacitor unit should withstand this
discharge transient.
The optimum connection for a SCB depends on the best utilization of the
available voltage ratings of capacitor units,fusing, and protective
relaying.Virtually all substation banks are connected wye.
various types of SCB designs are:
(1) Grounded wye-connection banks
(2) Underground wye-connection banks
(3) Delta connected banks
Delta-connected Banks
1.
CONCLUSIONS
The protection of shunt capacitor banks uses simple, well known relaying
principles such as overvoltage, overcurrents.
Unbalance is the most important protection in a shunt capacitor
bank, as it provides fast and effective protection to assure a long and
reliable life for the bank. To accomplish its goal, unbalance protection
requires high degree of sensitivity that might be difficult to achieve.