Top Banner

of 30

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
  • 1Prof. Charles Q. SuThe Petroleum Institute

    Case Studies on Power Cables

    Case study - 1

    Quality Management of Distribution Cables

    Professor Charles Q. Su( PhD, Fellow IET, SM IEEE, CIGRE A2 )

    Prof. Charles Q. SuThe Petroleum Institute

    About the workshop instructor- Prof. Charles Q. Su

    Industrial experience

    1970-1973 Operations engineer

    1974-1978 HV testing engineer

    2002-2006 Chief Technologist, Singapore Power (SPPG) Ltd

    Research & teaching experiences

    1985 Research Associate, University of Western Australia

    1990-1991 Lecturer at University of NSW, Australia

    1992-2001 Senior Lecturer & Associate Professor, Monash University

    2007-now Professor, Chair of Research Committee (EE)

    Petroleum Institute, UAE

    Membership of professional organisations

    Fellow of IET, Senior Member IEEE (91), member of CIGRE SC A2 (Transformer)

  • 2Prof. Charles Q. SuThe Petroleum Institute

    Ron E James & Q. Su Condition Assessment of HV Insulation in Power System Equipment - IET Power and Energy Series No.53, April 2008

    Prof. Charles Q. SuThe Petroleum Institute

    Some important issues in distribution cable

    management

    Causes of distribution cable failure:

    1. Damages (road digging, land movement etc)

    2. Manufacture defects (material of quality control problems)

    3. Poor workmanship (cable joints and terminals)

    4. Insulation ageing (water seepage, water treeing etc)

  • 3Prof. Charles Q. SuThe Petroleum Institute

    Condition assessment of distribution cables

    Criterion of condition assessment:

    1. The total failure rate.

    2. Frequency of a type of failure warrantees root cause analysis.

    3. The consequences of failures.

    4. Costs of repair or replacement.

    Prof. Charles Q. SuThe Petroleum Institute

    Cable insulation ageing in the life span

    Bathtub curve - Determined from the failure rate change (a number of the same insulation samples)

    TwTs

    0

    Random or slowly increa sing fa ilure ra te

    Bur n-in

    period

    Use ful life period We arout

    period

    Ope rating

    life

    Failure

    rate

  • 4Prof. Charles Q. SuThe Petroleum Institute

    Background

    There are over 3,700 km of 6.6kV cables in a utility. The average failure rate from 2000 - 2004 was 30 cables per year.

    Serious consequences:

    1. In-service failures of 6.6kV cables cause local blackout.

    2. Due to the time of failure (e.g. at mid-night) and the possible bad weather conditions at failure (e.g. thunder storm), restoration of power supply is difficult and could take many hours.

    There was an urgent need to reduce the in-service failures.

    AGE PROFILE OF DISTRIBUTION CABLES (2004)

    0.35% (13.109 km)

    9% (323.093 km)

    14% (541.152 km)

    25% (954.976 km)

    36% (1,349.877 km)

    15% (583.758 km)

    0

    6.6kV

    Cable Length

    : 3,768.647 km

    22kV

    Cable Length

    : 4,948.379 km

    21 25 yrs

    16 20 yrs

    11 15 yrs

    6 10 yrs

    < = 5 yrs

    6% (288.551 km)

    13% (668.678 km)

    25% (1,218.271 km)

    34% (1,694.035 km)

    22% (1,078.844 km)

    > 30 yrs

    26 30 yrs

    21 25 yrs

    16 20 yrs

    11 15 yrs

    6 10 yrs

    < = 5 yrs

    20 40 60 80 100 (%)

    0.07% (2.682 km)

    19% beyond the

    age of 15

    27% beyond the

    age of 15

  • 5Prof. Charles Q. SuThe Petroleum Institute

    How to reduce the in-service failures of 6.6kV cables?

    A. Cable replacements according to their designed life time?

    B. HV tests on all cables to flash out incipient faults? (using DC, AC or VLF)

    C. Replace the type of cable joints of high failure rate?

    Which one would you prefer if you are the asset manager?

    12 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    0

    10

    20

    30

    40

    50

    60

    70

    80

    Cable (XLPE) Cable (PILC) Joint

    Year

    Categories of 6.6kV Cable Failures( 2000-2005 )

    39

    25%

    45

    28%

    76

    47%

    * Total 160 failures

  • 6Prof. Charles Q. SuThe Petroleum Institute

    0.0

    5.0

    10.0

    15.0

    20.0

    25.0

    30.0

    35.0

    1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 31 33 35

    Year

    Age Profile of Failed 6.6kV XLPE Cables( 2000-2005 )

    Average age is around 20

    Implication: XLPE cable insulation is generally reliable within 15 years.

    Prof. Charles Q. SuThe Petroleum Institute

    Age Profile of Failed 6.6kV Cable Joints( 2000-2005 )

    Average 28 years

    Implication: Cable joint can fail at any time due to mainly poor workmanship, as

    well as bad quality of materials and insulation ageing

  • 715 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    EXISTING MAINTENANCE TESTS

    for 6.6kV cables

    Megger measurement - Resistance - Comparison between phases

    Polarization index (R10/R1)

    16 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    Effectiveness of Megger Test

    Detect the leakage caused by terminal contamination (surface crapping resistance)

    Water seepage to the joint

    Insulation deterioration (ageing), especially paper/oil cables

  • 817 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    Megger Test Alone Is Not Conclusive

    For example:

    Water tree contamination (before electric tree is established)

    Bubbles and unbridged cracks in XLPE or epoxy insulation

    18 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    Failures of cables with high megger readings

    Case (1)

    For example, cable A:

    Megger readings 1G/1G/1G on 16 Nov 2005

    The circuit failed on 17 Nov 2005 at 6:14am

    Also, in this utility a number of 6.6kV cables of high megger reading failed in the past.

  • 919 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    Case (2)

    A 66kV XLPE cable under a bus stop failed;

    It was found that the failure was due to an

    early damage caused by sinking an earthing

    rod;

    Lost about 1/3 of the XLPE insulation

    20 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    A close look

  • 10

    21 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    A surprise

    It was found that the bus stop was built five years

    before the failure.

    So, after the bad damage, the poor cable survived five more years before its insulation broke down;

    More surprisingly .

    Its insulation resistance was measured three times

    during the five years, always giving high megger

    readings!

    22 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    Why megger tests could not detect the

    incipient fault (damage)?

    XLPE insulation has a very large volume

    resistivity of 1016 .cm.

    The damage did not bridge the insulation.

    Water trees do not affect insulation

    resistance before electric treeing is

    established across the electrodes.

  • 11

    23 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    How to use megger tests effectively?

    Comparison of megger readings between phases;

    Trend analysis;

    Stability of insulation resistance reading under dc high voltage.

    Add polarisation index measurement in the analysis (PI = R10min / R1min)

    Prof. Charles Q. Su

    ACTION PLAN VLF tests on selected cables

    Selection criteria

    Cables with seram joints (more frequent failures)

    First leg feeders (important)

    Megger readings VLF test is carried out if :

    1. M < 50 M or

    2. 50 M < M < 200 M and K > 1.5 or

    3. 200 M < M < 1000 M and K > 5

    Where M is the minimum megger reading for the three phases and K the ration between the maximum and minimum phases.

  • 12

    Prof. Charles Q. Su

    VLF tests voltage and time duration

    For cables less than 10 years old, 2Uo for 15 minutes

    For cables older than 10 years, 1.7 Uo for 20 minutes

    These test voltages and time are in line with the new IEEE Standard on VLF tests IEEE Std 400.2TM 2004. The IEEE/EPRI/CEA and other world engineering bodies recommended test level for MV extruded cables is two to three times line to ground voltage for 15-60 minutes.

    Initial VLF Test

    Flowchart

    Note: M is the minimum megger

    reading of the three phases

  • 13

    28 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    Incipient Faults Averted by VLF Tests (May 2003 Dec 2005)

    0

    5

    10

    15

    20

    25

    30

    35

    40

    45

    50

    2003 2004 2005

    Num

    ber

    of fa

    ilure

    s

    29 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    VLF Tests on 6.6kV Cables(May 2003 to Dec 2005)

    Total Circuits Tested Failed During VLF Tests

    (incipient faults averted)

    540 97

    100% 18%

  • 14

    Statistics of 6.6kV Cable Failures between 2000-2005( Total 160 cable and joint failures )

    0

    5

    10

    15

    20

    25

    30

    35

    40

    1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006

    Year

    Nu

    mb

    er

    of

    failu

    res

    Before 2004, the cable failure rate was around 30 per year.

    In 2005, it dropped to 12, about 1/3 yoy

    31 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    Why Cable Still Fails after Passing VLF Test?

    Total Circuits

    Tested

    Failed During

    VLF Tests

    Failed in Service

    after VLF Tests

    540 97 20

    100% 18% 3.7%

  • 15

    32 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    Profile of the 20 Cables Failed After VLF Tests

    0

    2

    4

    6

    8

    10

    12

    14

    16

    18

    XLPE PILC Joint

    17

    2 1

    33 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    Age Profile of XLPE Cables Failed After VLF Test(Average 19.5 Years)

    0

    5

    10

    15

    20

    25

    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18

    Year

  • 16

    34 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    Why Cable Fails After VLF Test? ...

    The possible causes:

    More than one defects.

    Bad water tree contamination.

    VLF test time is too short.

    Electrical Tree Grow During VLF Tests(In case of two large water trees)

    Cable sheath

    Conductor

    XLPE

    insulation

    1. Star VLF test at 1.7Uo which may initiate electrical treeing on some large water trees.

    No electrical treeing is triggered on small water trees.

    2. The electrical trees start to grow until the largest one bridges across the insulation and

    causes flashover.

    No electrical tree is initiated on small water trees and

    defects

    Electrical trees are initiated at large water trees

  • 17

    Initial and Modified VLF Test Criteria

    Note: M is the minimum megger reading of the three phases

    37 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    Electrical Tree Growth under Different Voltages(IEEE Standard)

    Voltage Tree Growing Speed( mm/hour )

    50Hz 1.7

    0.1Hz

    Cos-rectangular

    7.8

    0.1Hz Sine 12.3

    Implication: The VLF test time should be sufficiently long.

  • 18

    6.6kV Cable Failures in 2005

    0.0

    5.0

    10.0

    15.0

    20.0

    25.0

    30.0

    35.0

    40.0

    Year

    5 PILC

    Ave Age = 30

    4 XLPE

    Ave Age = 22

    3 Joints

    Ave Age = 6

    39 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    HV Oscillating Wave Tests

    Energise cable by DC voltage source.

    After the voltage reaches a certain level, discharge through an inductor to ground.

    A damped oscillating voltage is established which may last for a few mini-seconds.

    Detect partial discharges and dielectric dissipation factor during OW tests.

    Locate PDs using PD mapping techniques.

  • 19

    40 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    PD mapping under OW tests.

    Some defects, especially those in cable joints, could be detected by PD mapping

    Detector sensitivity is not better than 100pC at site in noisy environment

    Not suitable for the detection of defects in XLPE insulation (very low PD level, normally

  • 20

    42 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    PD MAPPING TEST RESULTS

    43 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    PD MAPPING TEST RESULTS

  • 21

    Prof. Charles Q. Su

    Selection consideration:

    Recommended by standards

    From utilities experiences

    TEST VOLTAGES

    FOR 6.6KV AND 22KV XLPE CABLES

    Prof. Charles Q. Su

    Test Standards for 6.6kV and 22kV XLPE Cables

    IEC Standard 60502-2: 2005Power cables with extruded insulation and their accessories for rated voltages from 6 kV up to 30 kV

    European Standard CELENEC HD 620 S1 and HD 621 S1

    IEEE Standard 400.2-2004IEEE guide for field testing and evaluation of the insulation of shielded power cable systems using VLF

    EPRI report RP 3392-01/CEA 200-D-780A (1996)Trial guide for high voltage 0.1Hz tests on power cable systems in the field

  • 22

    Prof. Charles Q. Su

    IEC RECOMMENDED ELECTRICAL TESTS( For new 22kV cables after installation )

    AC 50/60Hz 1.7 Uo for 5 minutes or 24 hours under system voltage *

    AC 50/60Hz test voltage and time are determined by agreement between the purchaser and the contractor

    Other test methods (VLF, OW etc) are under consideration

    * IEC Standard 60502-2: 2005Power cables with extruded insulation and their accessories for rated voltages from 6 kV up to 30 kV

    EUROPEAN STANDARD(for PE and XLPE cables from 6kV to 36kV)

    Frequency Test voltage (rms)

    Test time

    0.1 Hz 3 x Uo 60 minutes

    50 Hz 2 x Uo 60 minutes

    European Standard for cable after laying test CENELEC HD 620 S1 AND 621 S1

    15 European countries signed the harmonization document 620 S1 and 621 S1 in 1996

  • 23

    VLF test voltage and duration

    adopted by some utilities in North America

    Age of cable Test voltage (RMS)

    6.6kV 22kV

    Newly installed 12kV (3.1Uo) 38kV (3.0Uo)

    1~10 years old 9.5kV(2.5Uo) 32kV (2.5Uo)

    10~30 years old 6.5kV(1.7Uo) 22kV (1.7Uo)

    Note: 1. Test duration is always 15 minutes. 2. The data is from HV Inc, America.

    IEEE Standard 400.2-2004IEEE guide for field testing and evaluation of the insulation of

    shielded power cable systems using VLF

    System Voltage

    rms in kV

    Acceptance Test

    rms or (peak)

    Maintenance Test

    rms or (peak)

    5 10 (14) - 3.5Uo 7 (10) 2.4Uo

    8 13 (18) 2.8Uo 10 (14) 2.2Uo

    15 20 (28) 2.3Uo 16 (22) 1.85Uo

    25 31 (44) 2.15Uo 23 (33) 1.6Uo

    35 44 (62) 2.2Uo 33 (47) 1.6Uo

    Test duration : 60 minutes

  • 24

    Prof. Charles Q. Su

    RECOMMENDATIONS(for 6.6kV and 22kV cable after laying tests)

    Insulation resistance test at 5kV

    - Purpose: detect poor workmanship and joint/terminal insulation leakage

    VLF tests at 2Uo RMS for 60 minutes

    - Purpose: flush-out insulation defects. If failed during VLF test, after repair the cable should be VLF tested again regardless of the insulation resistance.

    If necessary*, oscillating wave and PD mapping tests could be carried out at the following peak voltages: 1 Uo, 1.5 Uo and 2 Uo.

    - Purpose: detect and locate defective joints and insulation weakness

    * Criteria of PD level to be determined

    Prof. Charles Q. Su

    VLF and OW PD mapping tests flow chart

  • 25

    Prof. Charles Q. Su

    NEW DIAGNOSTIC TESTS( maintenance tests )

    DC component in AC leakage current

    - water tree detection

    Propagation characteristic spectroscopy

    - LV pulse attenuation versus frequency

    - For insulation ageing detection

    - Can apply to in-service cables

    AC superposition test (101Hz)

    - Detect the 1 Hz component

    - Detect water tree

    58 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    SUGGESTIONS

    Apply VLF tests to old PILC cables (age>20)

    For XLPE cables if 200M

  • 26

    59 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    CONCLUSIONS

    VLF Test has been successful in reducing 6.6kV cable failures and should be used according to the total insulation condition of the cable and joint assets.

    Review the test procedure and failures every two years.

    Some defects, especially those in cable joints, could be detected by PD mapping, during either VLF or OW tests.

    60 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    Case study - 2

    Failure Analysis of a 230kV/200MVA

    Transformer-Cable Termination

    Professor Charles Q. Su( PhD, Fellow IET, SM IEEE, CIGRE A2 )

    Training Course for Continuous Education

  • 27

    61 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    Background

    A new installation of transformer and cable termination

    The failure of yellow phase terminal occurred only 10 days after commissioning

    The failure caused an explosion and fire

    The transformer/cable terminal box was destroyed

    The transformer was significantly damaged

    About a quarter of the city was blackout

    62 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    Case study - 3

    Three 230kV Cables Failed After Only 3 Years

    Operation - Caused by a Design Problem

    Professor Charles Q. Su( PhD, Fellow IET, SM IEEE, CIGRE A2 )

    Training Course for Continuous Education

  • 28

    63 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    Background

    230kV 2000 mm2 XLPE cable, circuit length 7.2 km

    Installed in the middle of 2000 by a consortium of

    three manufacturers

    Loading was around 40% of rating

    F1 failed on 12 September 2003

    Only three years new

    Serious impacts to customers due to voltage dips

    Investigators of OEM insisted that the cable was damaged

    64 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    Background cont

    On 6 June 2004, another cable F3 failed

    Again, serious impacts to customers

    In June 2004, off-line PD measurement was carried

    out on feed 2 (F2)

    Large partial discharges (>100pC) were detected and located

    A 10m long cable was cut and sectionised

    Burnt damages to water swellable tape and semicon screen

    were found.

  • 29

    65 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    Questions

    Are the failures due to mechanical damage?

    Are they isolated failures?

    If not due to cable damages, what are the

    possible root causes?

    How to prevent the recurrence of the type of

    failures

    66 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    Case study - 4

    230kV Cable Joint Failures Due to

    Poor Workmanship

    Professor Charles Q. Su( PhD, Fellow IET, SM IEEE, CIGRE A2 )

    Training Course for Continuous Education

  • 30

    67 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    Background

    Failures of two 230kV XLPE cable joints during HV accommissioning tests. The cable and joints were madeby different manufacturers. The cable joints wererubber pre-moulded joints.

    Cable Joint A: circuit I, Red phase, joint bay 5/6: PDs were detected under 1.1Uo, PD inception voltage 120kV (0.9 Uo).

    In Red phase, circuit II, joint bay 2/3: The joint failed at 27kV (0.2 Uo) during HV ac tests.

    69 Prof. Charles Q. Su

    Wrong position the gripping shield is shifted out of the semi-conductive

    electrode, as shown by the

    corresponding mark left on the

    internal wall of the rubber moulding

    The mark on the internal wall of

    EPR rubber moulding