Lecture 1 - Power Systems Overview
Lecture 1 - Power Systems Overview
– An Overview
Switch Yard/Substation
Power Plant
500 kV Transmission Line Primary Grid
(11-30 kV/500 kV)
(500/132 kV)
Commercial/ 132 kV
Industrial SubTransmission Line
Customer
Distribution Transformer
Urban (11/0.415 kV) Primary Distribution Line
Customers
Secondary Grid
Secondary Distribution (132/11 kV)
Distribution
Underground Cable
Pole
To Other
Residential Residential 132 kV
Customer Substations
Customer
3
1.2 General Composition of a Power Network Continued
4
1.2.1 Power Generation
•Generation is generally far away from load centres.
•Different primary energy resources to stabilize pricing mechanism.
•Most of the electricity consumed worldwide is generated by three-
phase synchronous generators.
•In future with increased wind power generation asynchronous
induction generators will also be abundant.
•Fuel cells and photovoltaics will also contribute significantly in future.
•A synchronous generator has two parts; stator and rotor.
•Rotor, under steady-state conditions, rotates at synchronous speed.
•Synchronous machines are of two kinds:
Salient-pole machines
Round-rotor machines
•Steam turbine driven generators work at high speeds and have round
rotors.
•The rotor carries DC field winding.
•Hydro units work at low speed at have salient-pole rotors.
•Salient-pole rotors have damper windings besides field windings.
•Damper windings consist of bars, put in slots, on pole faces and 5
connected together at both ends.
1.2.1 Power Generation Continued
6
1.2.1 Power Generation Continued
8
1.2.2 Power Transmission
•Transmission of large blocks of energy at high voltages is more
efficient.
•Transmission voltages in Pakistan are 500 kV and 220 kV.
•132 kV, in Pakistan, is generally called sub-transmission voltage.
Lines operating at 132 kV are known as sub-transmission lines.
•Step-up transformers in generating substations are used to increase
the voltage to transmission voltages.
•Step-down transformers, in distribution substations, are used to
decrease the voltages to manageable levels such as 11 kV or 66 kV.
•High voltage transmission is mostly AC overhead lines.
•DC overhead transmission lines are increasing being used to
increase the stability of power systems or for inter-connections
between different countries.
•Transmission lines are usually meshed to increase the reliability of
power (see Figure).
•Overhead transmission lines maybe double circuit lines (see Figure).
•Transmission lines used bundled ACSR (aluminium conductor steel
reinforced) conductors. 9
1.2.2 Power Transmission Continued
Bundled conductors, with increased diameter, reduces inductance
of a transmission line.
Corona power loss also decreases due to lower potential gradients.
• One or two sky wires are used to provide protection against
lightning.
• Underground cables are used in areas where overhead
transmission lines are impractical.
10
1.2.2 Power Transmission Continued
11
1.2.3 Power Distribution
12
1.2.4 Power Utilization