CoordinationResistiveReach RC 20220208

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 27

Coordination of Resistive Reach of Phase and Ground

Distance Elements
Presented to
Western Protective Relay Conference, October 2021
Spokane, Washington, USA

Authored by
Charles Henville, Henville Consulting Inc.
and
Ritwik Chowdhury, Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories, Inc.

Abstract—This paper discusses the issue of coordination of resistive reach of phase and ground
distance elements used for transmission line protection. It addresses the considerations and benefits
of coordinating this aspect of distance elements considering possible fault resistance.
This page intentionally blank
Coordination of Resistive Reach of Phase and Ground
Distance Elements
1. Introduction

This paper investigates issues associated with coordinating resistive reaches of phase and ground
distance elements used for transmission line protection systems. These issues may be important if there
is significant resistance in the fault. Distance elements are most often used for high voltage (HV) and
extra-high voltage (EHV) transmission lines, so the significance of fault resistance at these voltages
will be the focus of the discussion. In the case of multiphase faults, arc resistance is the main component
of fault resistance. In the case of ground faults, other factors such as tower footing resistance, presence
or absence of shield wires, and tree resistance may also affect the fault resistance. Responses of both
mho and quadrilateral distance elements to resistive faults will be considered. Both communications-
independent and directional comparison communications-assisted tripping schemes may be adversely
affected by fault resistance (depending on the responses of various distance elements). The
investigation uses a tool that models faulted power systems and the responses of protective relays.1
The intent is to highlight the fact that the fault resistance may be sufficiently large in some cases
to elicit different responses of relays on different lines, or on different terminals of the same line. Such
different responses may adversely affect the security of transmission line protection systems.
Consideration of fault resistance may improve protection system security by preventing overtripping
for faults outside the protected zone.
2. Background

Distance relays are commonly applied to protect transmission lines. One of the important
properties of such relays is that they take advantage of the fact that line short circuits with low
resistance present mostly an inductive impedance to protection systems at the line terminal. The
impedance of overhead-air-insulated HV transmission lines is much more reactive than resistive, so
the reactive reach of a distance relay is a key factor in setting it. When setting these relays, it is normal
practice to check and consider coordination of reactive reaches. A forward-looking overreaching zone
should not reach past a faster zone beyond the remote terminal. For instance, a time-delayed Zone 2
should not reach past any instantaneous Zone 1 protecting remote lines or equipment. In some cases,
with a short line following a long line, it may not be possible to set the Zone 2 reach with sufficient
dependability without overreaching the remote Zone 1. In such cases, increasing the Zone 2 time delay
to coordinate with the remote Zone 2 is often done.
In some cases, particularly for ground fault protection, it is recognized that fault resistance may be
significant and require special consideration. In these cases, sensitivity to resistive ground faults may
be checked to ensure dependability. North American distance relay applications have historically been
more often mho functions than quadrilateral. Before the advent of multifunction line digital protection
systems, discrete phase distance relays with mho characteristics have often been applied in conjunction
with directional time and instantaneous ground overcurrent relays.
Multifunction line protection systems now make the application of ground distance functions
common. Quadrilateral functions are often applied, particularly for ground distance protection [1] [2].
For multiphase faults, fault resistance is not considered as frequently because the arc resistance is

1
ASPEN OneLiner, V 15.3

Page 1 of 25
usually small compared to the line reactance. However, in applications to short lines, quadrilateral
phase distance elements may also be applied for improved sensitivity to resistive faults.
This paper is primarily focused on coordination of step-distance schemes. Some of the issues may
also affect systems with single or redundant pilot protection schemes and are discussed in Section 8.2.
In this paper, we refer to primary and backup protection systems as applied to step-distance
schemes. Although these terms are generally well understood, to avoid any misunderstandings, the
terms are defined here as used in this paper. The primary protection system is closest to the fault on a
line and is expected to clear the fault before any more distant protection systems operate. There will
be at least one primary protection system at each terminal of a transmission line, and there will often
also be redundant primary protections. Backup protection is any other (than primary) protection that
might operate after a time delay for fault on a line. Note that backup protection is not the same as
redundant primary protection. Also note that in transmission systems, backup protection does not
necessarily have to operate for all faults on a line protected by its own primary protections. Figure 1
shows examples of primary and backup protections.
Other sources Other sources Other sources Other sources
and loads and loads and loads and loads

Faulted line

Backup protection(s) Primary protection(s) Primary protection(s) Backup protection(s)


(may be redundant) (may be redundant) (may be redundant) (may be redundant)

Figure 1 Example primary and backup protections.

As a general rule, for good selectivity, primary protection systems should always be faster than
backup protections, and if possible, more sensitive. In the case of simple overcurrent relays, the angle
of the apparent impedance due to the fault is usually not important. Full coordination can be checked
considering only current magnitude and time delay. However, in the case of quadrilateral distance
elements, separate measurements are made for resistive and reactive blinders. Although coordination
of reactive reach for bolted faults is normally checked, coordination of resistive reach is not necessarily
always checked. Further, in the case of mho distance elements, resistive and reactive reach cannot be
independently adjusted, and coordination for resistive faults has not historically been always checked.
See for example Figure 2, which shows the resistive and reactive reach margins of a primary and
backup relay pair of quadrilateral distance relays. The primary relay Zone 1 reactive blinder reaches
further than the backup relay Zone 2 reactive blinder. However, the primary relay Zone 1 resistive
blinder does not reach as far as the backup relay Zone 2 resistive blinder. Of course, infeed current that
the primary relay measures, but the backup relay does not, will decrease the relative sensitivity of the
backup relay. However, without studying the resistive reaches, whether the backup relay coordinates
with the primary relay, or what the coordination margins are, may not be known.

Page 2 of 25
This reactive reach margin But this resistive reach
always checked margin may not necessarily
always be checked

Zone 2

Zone 1

Backup relay origin


Primary relay origin

Figure 2 Coordination margins between a primary and backup relay pair.

3. Fault resistance

3.1. Phase faults


Fault resistances for multiphase faults are often not considered to be significant on HV systems.
The most significant component of fault resistance for multiphase faults is arc resistance. Arc resistance
will increase with length. As noted in [3], the arc length can increase at a rate of 33 meters per second.
Extension may be caused from the magnetic forces associated with the arc, convection of the plasma,
or wind and other environmental factors. Multiphase fault clearing times are usually less than one
second for HV systems, and the opportunity for arc length extension is very limited. However, in some
cases, slow fault clearing time may result in significant arc extension and associated arc resistance.
As reported in [4], the arc extension of a three-phase 138 kV fault temporarily moved the
impedance outside the characteristic of an overreaching Zone 2 relay on one side, causing delayed
clearing (43 cycles instead of 23 cycles) from that side. It was unexpectedly (but desirably) cleared
from the other side by ground overcurrent protection responding to unbalanced fault resistances due to
different arc lengths between the three phases.
In another case, reported in Appendix A of this paper, a breaker failed to interrupt a three-phase
fault on a 138 kV line. Over a few seconds, the arc extended to such an extent that a backup mho
distance relay with a time delay of 2.8 seconds was unable to detect and clear the fault. The fault
persisted for more than 10 seconds, and eventually cleared itself.
From these examples, it can be seen that (due to arc extension) there is a possibility, although
infrequent, of high fault resistance for multiphase faults if the protection delay is too long.
3.2. Ground faults
In the case of single-line-to-ground (1LG) faults, there is often a greater chance of faults with
significant resistance. Some of the causes of fault resistance are (i) arc resistance, (ii) tower footing
resistance, (iii) tree resistances, and (iv) other hazards, such as cranes and booms.
Because of this, many utilities have criteria that their transmission line protection has to be
dependable for 1LG faults with higher resistance than for multiphase faults [5]. For flashover to a

Page 3 of 25
tower, the arc resistance may be very small, similar to the case with multiphase faults. However, if the
tripping time is extended, there is a possibility of high arc resistance, just as in the case of multiphase
faults. Tower footing resistance requirements are significantly affected by the presence (or absence) of
lightning shield wires. Where these wires are applied, as is often the case, the tower footing resistance
is designed and constructed to be less than about 10 ohms [5] to prevent a backflash from the tower to
the phase conductor. In some cases, where the cost of keeping the footing resistance low is too great,
or where the lightning frequency is low, some utilities may elect to eliminate the shield wire and
associated tower footing grounding to reduce transmission line costs. In such cases, tower footing
resistance may be several hundred ohms [6]. Figure 3 shows an example of the aftermath of a 1LG
fault with tower footing resistance of approximately 200 ohms on an unshielded line that persisted for
several tens of minutes, resulting in significant hazard.

Figure 3 Aftermath of a 200-ohm 138 kV line 1LG fault.

Even with low tower footing


resistance, there is a possibility of
flashover of a line to a tall object such as
a crane or tree that may result in a 1LG
faut resistance much larger than 10 ohms.
Figure 4 shows a tree that suffered a
flashover from a 230 kV line. The tree
presented such a high resistance that a
quadrilateral distance relay set to cover
200 ohms primary resistance was not
able to sense the fault. The fault was
eventually cleared by ground time
overcurrent protection.
To provide dependable protection
Figure 4 Tree burned by flashover from 230 kV line
for 1LG faults that present a resistance
too high to be sensed by distance protection, many utilities apply ground overcurrent protection to their
transmission lines as supplementary protection [5]. It should be noted that basic ground overcurrent
protection makes faulted phase selection more complicated in single-phase tripping schemes. However,
if 1LG faults with high resistance beyond the sensitivity of ground distance relays are rare, it may be
acceptable to trip all three phases on ground overcurrent relaying for such faults even when single-
phase tripping and reclosing is applied.

Page 4 of 25
4. Resistive reach of quadrilateral elements

Quadrilateral elements have individually configurable reaches for reactance and resistance
elements. In modern relays, the resistive reach settings of each zone are usually independent of each
other. The system of Figure 5 will be used to show some of the issues associated with coordination of
a primary relay at the MID terminal of TL1, and a backup relay at the SRC terminal of TL2. In the
modeled system, the nominal voltage is 138 kV, and TL1 is identical to TL2. Positive-, negative-, and
zero-sequence infeed sources may or may not be present at MID. The positive-sequence voltage angle
of the source at REMOTE may be adjusted to cause a variable amount of pre-fault power flow.
20 km TL2 MID 20 km TL1
Z1S = 9.49 Ω ∠ 75.2° Z1S = 9.49 Ω ∠ 75.2°
Z1L = 9.49 Ω ∠ 75.2° Z1L = 9.49 Ω ∠ 75.2°
Z0S = 41.1 Ω ∠ 60.0° SRC REMOTE Z0S = 41.1 Ω ∠ 60.0°
Z0L = 41.1 Ω ∠ 81.7° Z0L = 41.1 Ω ∠ 81.7°

Zone 1 of Primary Protection Zone 2 of Primary


Zone 2 of Backup Protection Protection

Zone 3 of Backup Protection

Figure 5 Example 138 kV system used to show coordination issues.

In the following cases, faults are simulated on TL1, and the responses of primary and backup relays
are observed. Different fault locations are simulated and the responses of relays from different
manufacturers (identified as “MFR”) are shown. In this paper, three different manufacturer products
are investigated: “MFR A,” “MFR B,” and “MFR C.”
In the power system, there is always load at MID; so, it is desirable that TL2 remains in service for
any fault on TL1. Note that infeed at Bus MID is an important factor that affects relative reaches of
primary and backup relays. This is not discussed in this section but explored in Section 6.
4.1. Case 1—Simple case using identical primary and backup relays with no infeed at MID
Figure 6 shows the simulated response of primary and backup relays to a resistive 1LG fault close
in to MID on TL1. For this simple case, the system has been modeled as radial, with no load and no
infeed at MID, and the breaker open at the TL1 REMOTE terminal. It can be seen that for the simulated
fault on TL1, the TL1 Zone 1 element trips instantaneously, and the backup TL2 relay Zone 2 element
does not trip. This illustrates the apparent resistive reach margin between TL1 Zone 1 and TL2 Zone 2
elements on the RX diagram, and is matched by the responses of both relays.
MFR A Quad Ground

MID

MFR A Quad Ground

SRC

Figure 6 Simple case, with identical relays at MID terminal of TL1 and SRC terminal of TL2.

Page 5 of 25
Note that in Figure 6, axes impedances are scaled in primary ohms and relay settings are in
secondary ohms. The current transformer (CT) and voltage transformer (VT) ratios have both been
chosen to be 1200, so that ohmic values of primary and secondary impedances are the same as each
other. Note that the fault resistance is simulated as being 57 Ω close into the MID terminal. One may
expect the apparent impedance seen by the TL1 relay to be at 57 Ω∠0°. However, the plot shows an
apparent impedance of 27.08 Ω∠–4.4° with respect to the origin (MID) of the TL1 relay. This is
because the fault impedance is converted on the plot to an apparent impedance using (1).
𝑍𝑍𝐹𝐹
𝑍𝑍𝐴𝐴𝐴𝐴𝐴𝐴 = (1)
(1+𝑘𝑘0 )

where:
ZAPP is the apparent impedance.
ZF is the fault impedance.
k0 is the zero-sequence current compensation factor.
k0 is given by (2).
1 𝑍𝑍
𝑘𝑘0 = �𝑍𝑍0 − 1� (2)
3 1

where:
Z0 and Z1 are the line zero- and positive-sequence impedances, respectively.
In this case, the value of k0 is 1.11∠8.4°. Therefore, with respect to the TL1 relay, (3) is true.
57 Ω
𝑍𝑍𝐴𝐴𝐴𝐴𝐴𝐴 = = 27.08∠–4.4° (3)
(1 + 1.11∠8.4° )

4.2. Case 2—Differences in implementing resistance blinder


For Case 2, another manufacturer’s relay is added to TL1, and Case 1 is simulated again. The
responses of both TL1 relays and the response of the backup relay of Case 2 are shown in Figure 7.
In this case, everything is identical to Case 1 except for the addition of a third relay. The third relay
is identified as type “MFR B” to indicate a different manufacturer of the relay (from type “MFR A”).
Figure 7 shows that the TL1 MFR B relay has the same settings as the TL1 MFR A relay, but their
responses are different. The MFR A relay trips instantaneously by the Zone 1 function, but the MFR B
relay does not trip at all. Therefore, although the RX diagram shows that the MFR B relay should
operate faster than the backup MFR A relay, in fact, it does not. This is because the MFR B relay uses
an operating principle that measures the actual fault impedance, ZF (57 Ω∠0°) and not the smaller,
apparent fault resistance ZAPP (27.08 Ω∠–4.4°) from (1). The 57 Ω resistance measured by the MFR B
relay is outside even its Zone 2 resistive reach setting of 40 Ω.

Page 6 of 25
Quad Ground I0 MFR A Quad Ground I0
MFR B
Primary Primary

MFR A Quad Ground I0


MID
Backup

SRC

Figure 7 Case 2, like Case 1, but with a different type of relay added to MID terminal of TL1.

This case illustrates the importance of considering the measuring principle of the resistive blinder
when checking coordination, instead of simply relying on plots of characteristics on the RX diagram.
4.3. Case 3—Impact of reactance element tilt
Resistive faults can also result in a miscoordination of the reactance element. The reactance
element for Zone 1, given it is an underreaching zone, is typically biased toward security and set with
a negative tilt, as shown in Figure 8. On the other hand, the overreaching Zone 2 of the backup relay
is typically biased towards dependability and may be set with a flat or a positive tilt. Some
manufacturers allow only Zone 1 to have a negative tilt.
A 25 Ω fault was simulated at 50 percent of TL1 with the REMOTE terminal breaker open for the
case shown in Figure 8. Zone 2 of the primary and backup relays, both from the same manufacturer
and of the same type, operates at the same time, resulting in a miscoordination.
To coordinate the backup relay Zone 2 with the primary relay Zone 1, a secure practice is to ensure
they both have the same tilt. Alternatively, if the backup Zone 2 is not able to be tilted and the primary
Zone 1 is tilted downwards, it may be desirable to reduce the backup relay’s reactive reach to mitigate
a possible miscoordination, as shown in Figure 8.
MFR C Quad Ground Quad Ground
MFR C
ILOO P ILOO P

MID

SRC

Figure 8 Zone 2 of the primary and backup relays operate simultaneously due to
inconsistent tilt.

Page 7 of 25
Note that this MFR C relay is polarized by loop current (clarified in Section 4.4) and has been set
with a larger downward tilt (than the MFR A or MFR B relays) on the Zone 1 reactive reach blinder to
increase its security during high load flow.
4.4. Case 4—Polarizing considerations
As has been discussed in several references [1] [2] [7] [8], distance relays commonly use phase
comparators to define the thresholds of various elements. The two inputs to the comparators are the
operating signal and the polarizing signal. The signals may be obtained from the derived positive-,
negative-, and zero-sequence components of the fault quantities, or directly from the voltages and
currents present during the fault. Several voltage and current loops are measured during a fault, as
listed in Table I.
Table I Loop voltage and loop current associated with the different distance element loops.

Distance Loop Loop Voltage Loop Current


AG VA IA + k0 • 3I0
BG VB IB + k0 • 3I0
CG VC IC + k0 • 3I0
AB VA – VB IA – IB
BC VB – VC IB – IC
CA VC – VA IC – IA
The use of different polarizing signals can impact coordination. Relay manufacturers use different
polarizing currents [7] to improve the quadrilateral element performance for resistive faults, such as:
1. Self-polarized quadrilateral element—uses loop current (shown in Table I) as the polarizing
signal, which is affected by load flow, but is dependable for balanced three-phase faults. Can
provide dependability in single-phase tripping applications during the one phase open interval.
2. Zero-sequence current—benefits from strong zero-sequence paths presented by nearby power
transformers, has a polarizing signal unaffected by load, and is dependable for ground faults.
3. Negative-sequence current—typically is the most homogenous network, has polarizing signal
unaffected by load or zero-sequence mutual coupling, and is dependable for unbalanced faults.
A possible effect of using different polarizing currents is shown in Figure 9. The source at the
REMOTE bus is in service, and positive-sequence voltage lags the voltage source at the SRC bus by
30 degrees. This means there is heavy load flow from SRC to REMOTE. The zero-sequence source
impedance angle is also lower than the rest of the system (refer to Figure 5). The primary relay uses
zero-sequence current polarization, whereas the backup relay uses negative-sequence current
polarization, both provided by MFR A with a single setting change.
For a 20 Ω fault at 50 percent of TL1, Zone 2 of both primary and backup relays operates, showing
the miscoordination. A more secure approach is to use the same polarizing option to coordinate primary
and backup protection.

Page 8 of 25
MFR A Quad Ground I0

MID

MFR A Quad Ground I2

SRC

Figure 9 Zone 2 of the primary and backup relays operates at the same time due to use of
different polarizing currents.

5. Resistive reach of mho elements

Mho elements have one reach setting that determines both the reactive and resistive coverage. To
address various application challenges, different manufacturers use different choices for the polarizing
voltage [8]:
• Self-polarized—uses loop voltage (Table I); unreliable for close-in bolted faults when the
voltage is very small, or zero.
• Cross-polarized—uses voltages from unfaulted phases and is unreliable for close-in bolted
three-phase faults when all voltages are very small, or zero.
• Positive-sequence voltage—uses voltages from all phases to improve single-phase trip security
during open interval and is unreliable for close-in bolted three-phase faults when all voltages
are very small, or zero.
• Positive-sequence memory voltage—uses a portion of the pre-fault and faulted positive-
sequence voltage to improve single-phase trip security during open interval, reliability for
close-in bolted three-phase faults and performance in series-compensated lines.
Implementation differences between different relay manufacturers can also make a difference
when checking coordination for resistive faults. The tool used to demonstrate the characteristics only
shows the self-polarized mho characteristic on the RX diagram. However, the response of the relay, as
shown in the caption boxes, incorporates the polarization method used by the relay.

Page 9 of 25
The performance of the MFR C mho element for the system of Figure 5 is shown in Figure 10.
Zone 1 is set to 80 percent of line impedance, and the backup Zone 2 is set to 150 percent of the line
impedance. For a 6 Ω 1LG fault, the primary relay does not trip, whereas the backup relay Zone 2 trips
after a time delay, resulting in a miscoordination.

MFR C Mho Ground

MID

MFR C Mho Ground

SRC

Figure 10 Primary relay does not trip, whereas backup relay trips for a 6 Ω 1LG fault.

Page 10 of 25
In contrast, the expansion from the MFR A mho element reveals desirable coordination, as shown
via the 17 Ω fault in Figure 11 where Zone 1 of the primary relay operates, and the backup relay does
not. A lower fault resistance would allow Zone 2 of the backup relay to operate. A higher fault
resistance would be detected by Zone 2 of the primary relay without any operation from the backup
relay.

MFR A Mho Ground

MID

MFR A Mho Ground

SRC

Figure 11 Backup relay coordinates well with primary relay.

Page 11 of 25
The coordination of mho ground relays was explored further by checking a modified system where
TL1 was reduced in length and impedance to a value of half that shown in Figure 5. The TL1 MFR A
relay reach settings were adjusted accordingly. The results are shown in Figure 12. It can be seen from
this figure that when the primary protection reach is shortened, there could be a risk of miscoordination,
even for MFR A relays.
Figure 12 shows that for a close-in 1LG fault with 11 ohms of fault resistance, the primary relay
MFR A operates in Zone 2 time simultaneously with the backup relay Zone 2.

MFR A Mho Ground

Mho Ground

MFR A Mho Ground

Figure 12 When primary relay reach is shortened, backup relay may operate simultaneously.

Figure 10, Figure 11, and Figure 12 show the variability of coordination between primary and
backup mho relays for resistive faults. Given that multiphase faults with significant resistance may
occur occasionally (Section 3.1), and mho elements are applied more often as phase distance functions,
it may be helpful to check limits of coordination for multiphase faults as well as for 1LG faults. Lack
of complete coordination of mho elements for resistive faults is more likely when a short line follows
a long line. A similar issue arises with quadrilateral elements; however, they provide greater flexibility
for adjustment of resistive reach.
6. Coordinating resistive reach considering infeed

6.1. Effect of infeed


In transmission networks, many substations are terminals for more than two transmission lines.
Other sources, as shown in Figure 1, will often provide infeed to a fault that the primary protection will
see, but the backup protection will not. This infeed will cause the backup distance relays to reach
relatively shorter along the faulted line compared to the primary distance relays. The substations also
often have transformers that provide a path for zero-sequence currents during transmission line ground

Page 12 of 25
faults. These transformers will also allow infeed of zero-sequence current that may make primary
ground protection reach considerably further than the backup protection. The multiple sources provide
infeed that will desensitize a backup relay with respect to a primary relay.
6.2. Effect of different quadrilateral measuring principles
As noted in Section 4, there are different principles used by manufacturers to implement a
quadrilateral element. This section shows the effect of infeed and related considerations when adjusting
the resistive reach for the different principles. A 50 MVA transformer is added to serve the load at the
MID bus, as shown in Figure 13.
50 MVA
Z1S = 9.49 Ω ∠ 75.2° 20 km TL2 MID Z=10% 20 km TL1
Z1S = 9.49 Ω ∠ 75.2°
Z0S = 41.1 Ω ∠ 60.0° SRC Z1L = 9.49 Ω ∠ 75.2° Z1L = 9.49 Ω ∠ 75.2° REMOTE Z0S = 41.1 Ω ∠ 60.0°
Z0L = 41.1 Ω ∠ 81.7° Z0L = 41.1 Ω ∠ 81.7°

Zone 1 of Primary Protection Zone 2 of Primary


Zone 2 of Backup Protection Protection

Zone 3 of Backup Protection

Figure 13 Example system with zero-sequence infeed at MID.

Infeed from the transformer causes the apparent impedance calculated by the primary and backup
relays to be different, as shown in Figure 14, using MFR B’s zero-sequence polarized quadrilateral
element.

MFR B Quad Ground I0 Primary MFR B

MID

SRC

MFR B Quad Ground I0 Backup

MFR B

Figure 14 Coordination of ground quadrilateral element considering infeed.

Page 13 of 25
Figure 14 shows that for the 30 Ω fault close in to MID on TL1, the primary relay calculates a
30 Ω ground loop resistance. The backup relay, since it does not measure the zero-sequence infeed
from the transformer at the MID bus, calculates a resistance of 45.7 Ω. The Zone 2 resistance element
reach is then set according to (4). Considering a security margin of 15 percent (k = 0.85) and a primary
relay Zone 1 resistive reach of 30 Ω, the resistive reach setting of the backup Zone 2 should be lower
than 38.8 Ω. Figure 14 shows that with a setting of 38 Ω, neither the backup Zone 2 nor Zone 3 element
operates.
𝑅𝑅
𝑅𝑅𝑆𝑆𝑆𝑆𝑆𝑆_𝑍𝑍2 ≤ 𝑘𝑘 • � 𝐵𝐵𝐵𝐵𝐵𝐵𝐵𝐵𝐵𝐵𝐵𝐵 � • 𝑅𝑅𝑆𝑆𝑆𝑆𝑆𝑆_𝑍𝑍1 (4)
𝑅𝑅 𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃

where:
RSet_Z1 is the Zone 1 resistance element reach of the primary relay.
RSet_Z2 is the Zone 2 resistance element reach of the backup relay after considering infeed.
k is a security margin.
RBackup is the resistance calculated by the backup relay for the fault.
RPrimary is the resistance calculated by the primary relay for the fault.
The effect of infeed on the self-polarized quadrilateral element from MFR C is shown in Figure 15.
Unlike the example of Figure 14, the resistance values are not reported, but the distance zone detects
the fault if the associated apparent impedance (as plotted) is inside its characteristic.
MFR C

MID

MFR C

SRC

Figure 15 Coordination of self-polarized quadrilateral element considering infeed.

Coordination can then be achieved by applying (5). Using the apparent impedances from Figure 15,
a primary relay Zone 1 resistance reach of 30 Ω, and a margin of 15 percent (k = 0.85), the backup
relay Zone 2 resistive reach should be lower than 40.8 Ω. This value is larger than the resistive reach
of the MFR B example shown in Figure 14 further demonstrating that the coordination should be
checked for a particular manufacturer and operating principle.

Page 14 of 25
𝑍𝑍𝑍𝑍𝑍𝑍𝑍𝑍𝐵𝐵𝐵𝐵𝐵𝐵𝐵𝐵𝐵𝐵𝐵𝐵 − 𝑍𝑍1𝐿𝐿
𝑅𝑅𝑆𝑆𝑆𝑆𝑆𝑆_𝑍𝑍2 ≤ 𝑘𝑘 • � � • 𝑅𝑅𝑆𝑆𝑆𝑆𝑆𝑆_𝑍𝑍1 (5)
𝑍𝑍𝑍𝑍𝑍𝑍𝑍𝑍𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃𝑃

where:
Z1L is the positive-sequence impedance of the line associated with the backup relay.
ZappBackup is the apparent impedance calculated by the backup relay for the fault.
ZappPrimary is the apparent impedance calculated by the primary relay for the fault.
7. Real-life miscoordination example

A case is presented in this section where the 230 kV supply to a substation was unnecessarily
interrupted with significant consequences. The station was supplied by two 230 kV lines. There was a
resistive fault on one line, and the backup protection on the second (healthy) line tripped at the same
time as the primary protection on the faulted line. Note that in this case, the redundant, high-speed
communications-assisted protection on the faulted line did not operate, due to the high resistance of
the fault. The WEST terminal could not see the fault and the weak-infeed echo feature at WEST was
not enabled, so the NORTH terminal did not trip with high speed.
Figure 16 shows the reduced network diagram with the faulted 230 kV line (NORTH to WEST
station) and the unfaulted 230 kV line (SOUTH to NORTH) that undesirably tripped simultaneously.
The zero-sequence current (3I0) magnitudes and angles to the fault in the faulted and the unfaulted
lines are shown. Zero-sequence voltages (V0 in pu) and angles at each of the stations are also shown.
Network equivalent lines and generators are shown as black lines. A 1LG fault with a resistance of
65 Ω was simulated at 4 percent of the distance from NORTH to WEST stations.

Figure 16 230 kV faulted network.

The fault resistance was sufficiently high that the Zone 1 quadrilateral element at the NORTH
terminal of the faulted line did not respond; so, it tripped after the Zone 2 time delay. The Zone 2
element of the backup protection at the SOUTH terminal of the unfaulted line tripped simultaneously,
thus disconnecting the 230 kV supply to the NORTH station.

Page 15 of 25
Figure 17 shows the responses of the primary and backup relays to the simulated fault. It can be
seen from the captions that the NORTH 21G Zone 2 function trips simultaneously with the SOUTH
21G Zone 2 function.
Note the small squares close to the x-axis on Figure 17, that show the apparent impedance
presented to the NORTH 21G relay appears to be inside the Zone 1 characteristic of the NORTH 21G
element. However, this is simply because the apparent impedance plotted on the diagram is the classical
impedance (ZAPP) calculated according to (1), while the relay algorithm uses a different measurement
to determine the apparent resistance.
It can be seen from Figure 17 that the set resistive reach of the primary Zone 1 element is 5 Ω
secondary, while the set resistive reach of the backup Zone 2 element is much larger at 26 Ω secondary.
The larger resistance measured by the backup relay is due to infeed at the NORTH substation. The
summary of relay quantities in Figure 17 shows that the resistance measured by the primary relay is
6.921 Ω secondary, which is outside the (5 Ω) reach of the primary Zone 1 element. The impedance
measured by the backup relay is 18.463 Ω secondary, which is inside the (26 Ω) reach of the backup
Zone 2 element. Therefore, the primary Zone 2 element operates at the same time as the backup Zone 2
element, and the NORTH station loses its 230 kV supply.
To ensure coordination, the resistive reach of the backup Zone 2 element (RSet_Z2) should be set
using (4) with the values from Figure 17 shown in (6). For instance, if a 15 percent security margin
(k = 0.85) is desired, we would set RSet_Z2 to a value less than 11.34 Ω secondary.
18.463 Ω
𝑅𝑅𝑆𝑆𝑆𝑆𝑆𝑆_𝑍𝑍2 ≤ 0.85 • � �• 5 Ω = 11.34 Ω (6)
6.921 Ω

MFR B Primary MFR B Backup

Apparent Z to
North 21G Apparent Z to
South 21G

Figure 17 Responses of primary and backup relays to the simulated fault.

Page 16 of 25
8. Checking resistive reaches using relay models in a computer program

The resistive coordination check can be performed after the distance relays are known to coordinate
for bolted faults. In this section, we note practices that may result in miscoordination and apply the
principles discussed in the previous sections to provide an example of how coordination may be
verified using a computer program. Different system operating conditions, including contingencies,
should also be simulated but are not elaborated here.
8.1. Step distance Zone 2 coordination with respect to adjacent line Zone 1
Practices that may result in miscoordination between step distance Zone 2 with respect to adjacent
Zone 1, even when coordinating the same manufacturer’s primary and backup relays, include the
following:
1. The ratio of resistive-to-reactance reach of Zone 2 may be set equal to that of Zone 1. Given
that Zone 2 reactive reach includes another line, this may result in a greater resistive reach for
the backup Zone 2. This can result in miscoordination even when applying relays from the
same manufacturer.
2. The reactance element tilt for the backup Zone 2 may be set greater (more positive) than the
tilt of the Zone 1 it coordinates with. As evident from Section 4.3, this can result in a
miscoordination.
3. Different polarizing options may be selected for the primary and backup relay pair, which can
result in miscoordination for resistive faults due to the effect of load, system nonhomogeneity,
or infeed.
Figure 18 shows an example of well-coordinated primary and backup distance zones for the system
of Figure 13, with the transformer presenting infeed at the remote terminal in service. For a close-in
fault with fault resistance of 15 Ω, the primary relay Zone 1 operates, whereas Zone 2 and Zone 3 of
the backup relay do not. The relevant settings are described below:
• Zone 1 of primary protection:
o Reactance element tilt = a tilt of –7 degrees, depending on system nonhomogeneity
o Resistance element reach = 30 Ω, with a tilt at the line angle
• Zone 2 of backup protection:
o Reactance element tilt =the same tilt of –7 degrees as primary relay’s Zone 1
o Resistance element reach = 38 Ω, with settings calculated in Section 6.2 and
coordination verified with infeed during various system contingencies
MFR B Quad Ground I0 Primary

MFR B Quad Ground I0 Backup

Figure 18 Zone 2 does not detect the fault and coordinates with Zone 1.

Page 17 of 25
8.2. Pilot reverse blocking zone coordination with pilot forward overreaching zone
For pilot protection, the reverse blocking zone of the protected line coordinates with the forward
overreaching zone, as shown for the TL2 relays in Figure 19. It is sometimes the case that the reverse
zone is set by subtracting the line impedance, then applying a coordination margin. While this practice
works well for bolted faults, it may not always work for resistive faults. It is of greater importance to
verify coordination when applying dissimilar relays as part of the pilot scheme.
50 MVA
Z1S = 9.49 Ω ∠ 75.2° 20 km TL2 MID Z=10% 20 km TL1
Z1S = 9.49 Ω ∠ 75.2°
Z0S = 41.1 Ω ∠ 81.7° SRC Z1L = 9.49 Ω ∠ 75.2° Z1L = 9.49 Ω ∠ 75.2° REMOTE Z0S = 41.1 Ω ∠ 60.0°
Z0L = 41.1 Ω ∠ 81.7° Z0L = 41.1 Ω ∠ 81.7°

Pilot Reverse Blocking Zone


Pilot Forward Overreaching Zone

Figure 19 Example system showing relative reach of pilot reverse blocking zone with respect
to pilot forward overreaching zone.

Figure 20 shows an example of well-coordinated ground pilot mho zones, with both the forward
overreaching zone and the reverse blocking zone set with the same reach. Using the short-circuit
program, we see that for a close-in reverse 10 Ω fault, the blocking zone (Zone 5) picks up and
coordinates with the overreaching zone (Zone 4), which does not pick up.

MFR A Mho Ground

MFR A Mho Ground

Figure 20 Pilot reverse blocking zone picks up and coordinates with forward
overreaching zone.

Page 18 of 25
9. Conclusion

This paper has reviewed the possible need for coordination of resistive reaches of primary and
backup distance relays. It is recognized that such coordination is not always achievable and is less
important for phase distance relays than for ground distance relays. In rare cases, a significant increase
in arc resistance may be found in slowly cleared multiphase faults.
In the case of mho elements, reach in the resistive direction is not settable, and depends primarily
on the type of polarization of the mho function. Different types of mho distance relays may exhibit
different amounts of expansion of their characteristics in the resistive direction.
In the case of quadrilateral elements, different types of relays may have different algorithms to
determine the resistive blinder reach. This may make the coordination of resistive reaches difficult to
ascertain from mere observation of the characteristics on an RX diagram. Infeed that the primary relay
sees, and that the backup relay does not see, can also complicate verification of coordination. It may
be necessary to use accurate models of the relays in a coordination verification program to determine
resistive reach coordination.
Users may consider reviewing their quadrilateral ground distance relay setting criteria to consider
coordination in the resistive direction. In cases where resistive reach coordination of ground distance
elements cannot be achieved using company-specific criteria, relay setting engineers may consider
reducing the resistive reach of the backup relay and placing more dependence on ground time
overcurrent protection for highly resistive faults within the resistive reach of the underreaching zone
of the primary relay [9]. Such resistive faults may not need to be cleared with the same speed as lower-
resistance faults.
10. Acknowledgements

The authors gratefully acknowledge the careful reviews of this paper, and helpful comments, of
Fernando Calero, Ryan McDaniel, and Ralph Barone.
11. References

[1] Ward, S., “Comparison of Quadrilateral and Mho Distance Characteristic,” proceedings of the 26th
Western Protective Relaying Conference, Spokane, WA, October 1999.
[2] Calero, F., “Distance Elements: Linking Theory With Testing,” proceedings of the 35th Western
Protective Relaying Conference, Spokane, WA, October 2008.
[3] Terzija, V. V. and Koglin, H., J., “A new approach to arc resistance calculation,” Electrical
Engineering, vol. 83, pp. 187–192, February 2001.
[4] Miller, D., “Three Phase Bus Fault with Fault Impedance,” proceedings of the 42nd Western
Protective Relaying Conference, Spokane, WA, October 2015.
[5] IEEE Std C37.113-2015, IEEE Guide for Protective Relay Applications to Transmission Lines,
2015.
[6] Lefrancois, M. J., “Mica 500 kV Protection—A Segregated Phase Comparison System with
Special Features for High Tower Footing Resistance,” proceedings of the 5th Annual Western
Protective Relay Conference, October 1978.
[7] Calero, F., Guzman, A., and Benmouyal, G., “Adaptive Phase and Ground Quadrilateral Distance
Elements,” proceedings of the 36th Annual Western Protective Relay Conference, Spokane, WA,
October 2009.

Page 19 of 25
[8] Schweitzer, E., and Roberts, J., “Distance Relay Element Design,” proceedings of the 19th Annual
Western Protective Relay Conference, Spokane, WA, October 1992.
[9] Mohajeri, A., Seyedi, H., and Sabahi, M., “Optimal setting of distance relays quadrilateral
characteristic considering the uncertain effective parameters,” International Journal of Electrical
Power and Energy Systems, July 2015.
12. Appendix A—A high-resistance, self-clearing multiphase fault

In the field event discussed here, delayed fault clearing following a three-phase 138 kV fault
resulted in the arc extending sufficiently to self-clear after around 10.6 seconds. A three-phase fault
occurred on a line in a 138 kV network supplied from a 3,000 MW generating station (GEN), as shown
in Figure 21. The fault was located on Line L138 between the stations GEN and WEAK.
TAP
STN 4

STN 1
WEAK

L138
GEN STN 2

LREM

STN 3
REM

Figure 21 Single-line diagram of a faulted 138 kV line (L138) with simulation of the fault.

Figure 21 does not show the detailed station arrangements. The 138 kV bus arrangement at the
WEAK station is a ring bus, with two circuit breakers at the terminal. This fact is relevant because,
during the incident, one of the two breakers at WEAK failed to open, and the bus at WEAK became
split.
A lightning-initiated short circuit on Circuit L138 started as a three-phase fault and was promptly
cleared by the GEN terminal. However, due to a breaker failure condition of one of the two breakers
at WEAK terminal, the fault was not promptly cleared by that end. The fault continued to be fed by
the remote source of the adjacent circuit from REM to WEAK. None of the time-delayed overreaching
zones (Zone 2 or Zone 3) at the REM terminal of the remote line operated. The GEN terminal was
automatically reclosed 10 seconds later while the line was still energized from the WEAK terminal.
By the time of reclosure of the GEN terminal, the fault had reduced itself in severity from a three-phase
to a phase-to-phase (CA) fault. The GEN terminal was tripped promptly a second time while the fault
continued to remain energized from the WEAK terminal. After some more time of unknown duration,
the fault eventually cleared itself.

Page 20 of 25
12.1.1. Sequence of events
The relays initially reported a fault location of 22.98 km from the GEN relay and 76.38 km from
the WEAK relay. The observed currents and voltages at GEN and WEAK match well with fault study
calculated currents and voltages (for a zero-ohm fault) at 23 percent of the line from GEN (see
Figure 21). Therefore, it can be assumed that the fault started as a three-phase fault with negligible
fault resistance. Figure 22 shows the responses of the relays at both terminals of the line to the initial
fault. Some points to note about all the figures in this paper showing relay recordings are as follows:
• The analog plots are pseudo-oscillographic. They are plots of fundamental frequency
components (phasor values) of currents and voltages after filtering to remove nonfundamental
frequency components, such as transient offset and harmonics. They are not plots of sampled
values. This is the reason for apparent slow rise and fall of currents and voltages over
approximately 1 1/4 cycles. The analog quantities are scaled in root-mean-square (rms) values.
For instance, in the case of the GEN terminal recording, the magnitudes of the fundamental
frequency components of the phase currents are approximately 4,100 A rms.
• The vertical broken red line on the record shows the instant the recording function was
triggered. There are always 4 cycles of pretrigger recording on each record.
• The captions of digital events have the following meanings:
− ET is an external event trigger from a trip output from the second main protection. It allows
comparison of trip times from the relay that recorded the event and the second redundant
protection system.
− 52A is a normally open auxiliary contact from both circuit breakers. It shows open when
both circuit breakers are open.
− OUTTP is a trip output from the relay that recorded the event.
− 21P is a phase-to-phase distance element. The distance relay principal is a compensator
distance relay with a phase-to-phase element that operates only for two phase-to-phase
faults. The number on the event plot shows which zone of the distance function has
operated. In the case of the GEN terminal protection in Figure 22, the Zone 2 of the phase-
to-phase element asserts transiently, then resets, since the fault is a three-phase fault.
− 213 is the three-phase distance element. It is the second part of the compensator distance
protection function. It operates only for three-phase faults. The numbers on the event plot
are similar to those of the phase-to-phase distance function event. In the case of the GEN
terminal protection in Figure 22, the three-phase Zone 3 element picks up first and starts
timing, but the Zone 1 element picks up only half a cycle later and the relay issues a trip
command.

Page 21 of 25
Figure 22 shows that the relay at GEN terminal issued a trip signal approximately 1 cycle after the
fault started (when the currents can be seen to start to increase). The breakers at GEN cleared the fault
from that terminal approximately 4 cycles after the trip command was issued (when the currents can
be seen to start to decrease).
Note that plots of the fundamental frequency components include a filter delay that hinders precise
timing of analog events. However, recordings of the filtered analog quantities facilitate comparison
between real life quantities and fault study simulations, which are only steady-state fundamental
frequency simulations.
Figure 22 shows that the protection at the WEAK terminal issued a trip command about
1 1/2 cycles after the fault started, but the fault did not clear. This is because one of the two breakers
that needed to trip failed. The clearing of the fault from the GEN terminal can be seen in Figure 22,
when the fault currents and voltages rise slightly as fault current contribution from the WEAK terminal
increases. Post-event testing of the breakers at WEAK terminal confirmed that there was a failure in
the trip circuit in one of the two breakers.

GEN L138 terminal protection WEAK L138 terminal protection

Figure 22 Recordings of initial three-phase fault from GEN (left) and WEAK (right)
terminals.

There was a small amount of negative-sequence current in the contribution from WEAK terminal
that caused the phase-to-phase element to pick up intermittently during the fault, but the three-phase
element (mostly Zone 1, with some instances of Zone 2) was picked up solidly the whole time.

Page 22 of 25
The starting time of the initial fault will be set at t = time “T,” and the time of all subsequent events
is related to this time. At T + 0.17 seconds, the breaker failure protection for the failed breaker at the
WEAK terminal operated. Figure 23 shows part of the station arrangement at the WEAK terminal and
which breaker opened and the failed breaker.
Substation WEAK

WEAK L138
This breaker
Protection
opened OK by
L138 PN.
L138 to
GEN
Failed breaker WEAK LREM
at WEAK protection

This breaker
opened by breaker LREM
failure protection at to REM
T+0.17s

Figure 23 Single-line diagram of part of Substation WEAK.

When the breaker failure protection operated, the bus at the WEAK substation was split, with
faulted Line L138 together with the line LREM becoming isolated from WEAK. At this time, a record
was triggered on the protection at the adjacent WEAK terminal of Line LREM. Figure 24 shows this
record.
Figure 24 shows that the current through LREM increases (and voltage decreases) at the moment
all other infeed to WEAK is removed by the breaker failure protection. Now all the current to the fault
is supplied through Line LREM. There is no fault current supplied through STN 4 or from the local
generator at WEAK.

U To REM line terminal protection


WEAK

BFPN Operates Adjacent CBs at WEAK


now open. Only infeed
from LREM now

Figure 24 Infeed to WEAK Terminal from Line LREM at T + 0.17 seconds.

Page 23 of 25
Figure 25 shows the reconfigured system as simulated in post-fault analysis. Note that the fault
location was actually behind the WEAK terminal of Line LREM, so even though an overcurrent
function had started, no protection tripping elements at this terminal operated. Figure 25 shows that the
magnitude of the positive-sequence fault current is significantly decreased from the initial total value
of 5,000 A to just over 500 A. The contribution from the WEAK terminal has decreased from just over
1,000 A to just over 500 A.

Figure 25 WEAK station reconfigured after breaker failure protection removes most infeed.

At time approximately Weak L138 term

T + 10 seconds, the GEN


terminal of the line L138 was
automatically reclosed. At
the time of reclosure, the
fault had degenerated into a
Phase-A-to-Phase-C fault,
and Phase B was no longer
faulted. GEN terminal GEN terminal
tripped immediately, because has reclosed on
to 2 Ph fault GEN term
the fault had never been terminal c

completely cleared. A fault


record, shown in Figure 26,
was triggered at the WEAK
terminal when the GEN
terminal opened. This record
was triggered by receipt of a
direct transfer trip from the Figure 26 Record from WEAK terminal after automatic
GEN terminal. The fault reclose at GEN terminal of L138.
remained energized from the WEAK terminal. Figure 26 shows that by the time of reclose, only a
Phase-A-to-Phase-C fault existed. Note that although the WEAK terminal Zone 2 function is still
asserted after 10 seconds, the breaker has failed to open.

Page 24 of 25
The fault record shown in Figure 26 was simulated on a fault study and relay modeling computer
program to try to replicate the currents, the voltages, and the apparent impedances presented to relays
at WEAK and REM. The simulated result is shown in Figure 27. This figure shows the characteristics
of two relays, one (colored blue) at
the WEAK terminal of L138 and one Compensator distance

(colored red) at the REM terminal of


the line LREM.
The simulation showed that a
Phase A to Phase C fault with a
resistance of 80 ohms brings the
Phase A and C currents and voltages
close to recorded values. The
simulated impedances for a phase-
to-phase fault with 80 ohms of
resistance puts the apparent Compensator distance

impedance outside the reach of the


backup (at REM) distance function.
It can be seen from Figure 27 that the
high fault resistance prevents the
backup Zone 3 function at REM
station from tripping.
A later line patrol of L138 could
not find any visible signs of damage Figure 27 Responses of WEAK and BACKUP
near the estimated fault location. relays after GEN terminal opens a second time.

13. Biographies

Charles Henville earned his BA and MA (in engineering) from Cambridge University, England,
and MEng. from the University of British Columbia, Canada. He has worked as a protection engineer
for 27 years for a major Canadian utility, and since 2005 as principal of his own consulting firm. He is
active in the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE), especially the Power System
Relaying Committee, and is a Fellow of the IEEE. He is adjunct faculty at the University of Wisconsin,
Madison, Gonzaga University, and the University of British Columbia. He is a registered professional
engineer in the province of British Columbia.

Ritwik Chowdhury earned his BS degree in engineering from the University of British Columbia
and his MS degree in engineering from the University of Toronto. He joined Schweitzer Engineering
Laboratories, Inc. (SEL) in 2012, where he is presently a senior engineer. Ritwik holds 7 patents and
has helped author 20 technical papers. He is the vice-chair of the Relaying Practices Subcommittee
(I-SC) at the IEEE PSRC committee and the chair of two IEEE Standards Working Groups. Ritwik is
a senior member of the IEEE and a registered professional engineer in the province of Ontario.

Page 25 of 25

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy