Experimental Study on Response of Non- and Externally-Gapped Metal-Oxide Arresters Excited by Nanosecond-Level Transient Electromagnetic Disturbances

Metal-oxide arresters (MOA), including the non-gapped MOAs (NG-MOA) and externally-gapped MOAs (EG-MOA), are the main equipment applied to protect the power system against conducted transient electromagnetic disturbances (TED). However, MOAs exhibit quite different electrical characteristics under m...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:IEEE transactions on power delivery 2023-04, Vol.38 (2), p.1239-1247
Hauptverfasser: Wu, Yu-ying, Xie, Yan-zhao, Ge, Yan-peng, Wang, Yu-bo, Li, Ze-tong, Cao, Han
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext bestellen
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Metal-oxide arresters (MOA), including the non-gapped MOAs (NG-MOA) and externally-gapped MOAs (EG-MOA), are the main equipment applied to protect the power system against conducted transient electromagnetic disturbances (TED). However, MOAs exhibit quite different electrical characteristics under microsecond-level and nanosecond-level transients. In order to figure out the response of MOAs under nanosecond-level TED, experimental platforms are built which contain a pulse generator with the amplitude of pulse current adjustable from 0 kA to 5 kA and the rise time of 20 ns. Then the dynamic hysteresis loops, the static V-I characteristics, the response time delay and the full response process of five types of 10-kV MOAs are investigated. From the dynamic hysteresis loops of NG-MOAs, the impedance conversion process can be seen clearly and can be explained by the grain-boundary theory. But EG-MOAs has not this conversion process due to the air-gap. And the experimental results demonstrate that there is no noticeable nanosecond-level conduction delay on NG-MOAs whereas the electric field non-uniformity of the air-gap has a significant influence on the time delay of the EG-MOAs. The response time delay of EG-MOAs changes ranging from tens of nanoseconds to hundreds of nanoseconds. This feature makes EG-MOAs more likely to raise insulation risks under nanosecond-level TED compared with NG-MOAs.
ISSN:0885-8977
1937-4208
DOI:10.1109/TPWRD.2022.3211615