Course Code: EE-4123 High Voltage Engineering
Course Code: EE-4123 High Voltage Engineering
Course Code: EE-4123 High Voltage Engineering
Presented by
Md. Shamim Sarker
Assistant Professor
Dept. of EEE, KUET
Objectives
In this course you will learn the following:
What is high voltage?
Why needed
Levels of voltages
Application of High Voltage
Electrical Insulation and Dielectrics
What is high voltage
A mobile phone is operated from a 4V
battery. It may be destroyed if anyone
attempts to operate it from a 12V car
battery.
Therefore 12V is quite a high voltage for a
mobile phone.
What is high voltage
230kV
High voltage is specially
down
Step referred230kV
Step to
transformer is 230kV up
electrical power system.
used to reduce
transformer is
used to rise the
the voltage to Long transmission line used to
voltage to 132kV
33kV carry the power to Dhaka
or 230kV
33kV
Step down
At Kaptai we
transformer is
used to reduce 11kV
generate at 11kV
or 21kV
the voltage to
11kV
11kV
Another Step down transformer
is used to reduce the voltage 400V 230V
Domestic users get electricity at
further to 400V suitable for end 230Volt.
user.
What is high voltage
I 2V
Therefore we see that if the transmission
Transformer Equation for
line voltage is increased it is power
capableis of
transmitting
V more power without
P= V I Cos
increasing the power loss in the line.
I I
Generator
Trends in voltage growth
Ac voltage
Unfortunately it is
a very old data.
Students
In our country theare
highest requested
operating to
voltage isupdate
230kV.it.
We may realize our
position related to
the global trend.
Trends in voltage growth
dc voltage
Unfortunately
In our country we
HVDC transmission
has been do not have
proven to any
HVDC
be less attractive to
the power transmission
system
system so far.
engineers.
Fields of applications of HV
• Power system engineering
• Research laboratories
• IndustriesInterested
• Nuclear research, particle
students may find
accelerators
new areas
• Electrostatic of
precipitators
application
• Automobile of coils
ignition HV
• Medical applications like X-ray
machine
What we learn in
High Voltage
Engineering
• Testing of HV equipments like
power transformers, bushings,
CB, insulators, cables etc.
• Usually tests are done at a
voltage much higher than the
operating voltage.
• Generation, measurement and
control of different types of HV.
What we learn in
High Voltage
Engineering
Voltage 140kV
In
kV
In high voltage engineering,
we should always be careful
100kV
about the peak value power
of the ac
frequency
voltage, because this isacthe
voltage
maximum voltage in the
system and may be responsible
Time
for initiating breakdown or In
failure. ms
?
10 ms
dc High Voltage100kV
Voltage
In
?
kV
100kV
dc voltage
Time
In
ms
Lightning Impulse
Voltage
In 90%
?
500kV
kV
500kV
50% li
10%
t0
t3 Time
t1 t2 In
μs
Wave front
=1.25(t2-t1) Wave tail
=t3-t0
Course outline
Course No. EEE 4309
Course Title : High Voltage Engineering
d.c. transmission :
dc single pole and bipolar lines : ± 100 kV to ± 500 kV
Advance countries like US, Canada and Japan have their single phase ac
power consumption level at 110 V .Rest of the whole world consumes
single phase ac power at 220 V .
The only advantage of 110 V single phase consumer voltage is that it is
safer over 220 V. However, the disadvantages are many.
Disadvantages :
It requires double the magnitude of current to deliver the same amount of
power as at 220 V
Hence for the same magnitude of I2R losses to limit the conductor or the
insulation temperature to 70° C (for PVC) , the resistance of the distribution cable
should be 4 times lower. Therefore, the cable cross-section area has to be
increased four folds.
Four times more copper requirement, dumped in the building walls is an
expensive venture.
Due to higher magnitude of current, higher magnetic field in the buildings .
Not good for health.
With the installation of modern inexpensive protective devices (earth fault
relays), 220 V is equally safe as 110 V
Rated maximum temperature of cables:
It is important to understand the current and voltage carrying
capacities of a conductor separately. While the current carrying
capability is determined by the conductivity of the conductors, directly
proportional to the area of conductor cross-section, the voltage
bearing capacity depends upon the level of insulation provided to the
conductor .
The current carrying capability in turn is determined by maximum
permissible temperature of the insulation or that of the conductor.
The real power loss, I2R and the rate of cooling determine the
temperature rise of the conductor which should not be more than the
maximum permissible temperature of the type of insulation provided
on the conductor .
Hence, not only electrical but thermal and mechanical properties of
insulation are important in power system .
Electrical Insulation and Dielectrics
Gaseous Dielectrics:
Atmospheric air is the cheapest and most widely used dielectric .
Other gaseous dielectrics, used as compressed gas at higher pressures
than atmospheric in power system, are Nitrogen , Sulphurhexafluoride
SF6(an electro-negative gas) and it's mixtures with CO2 and N2 . SF6 is
very widely applied for Gas Insulated Systems (GIS), Circuit Breakers
and gas filled installations i.e. sub-stations and cables. It is being now
applied for power transformers also.
Vacuum as Dielectric :
Vacuum of the order of 10-5 Torr and lower provides an excellent
electrical insulation. Vacuum technology developed and applied for
circuit breakers in the last three decades is phenomenon .
Liquid Dielectrics:
Organic liquids, the mineral insulating oils and impregnating
compounds, natural and synthetic, of required physical,
chemical and electrical properties are used very widely in
transformers, capacitors, cables and circuit breakers.
Ex: Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs)
Solid Dielectrics:
Very large in number .
Most widely used are : XLPE, PVC, ceramics, glass, rubber,
resins, reinforced plastics, polypropylene, impregnated
paper, wood, cotton, mica, pressboards, Bakelite, Perspex,
Ebonite, Teflon, etc.
Introduction of nano materials are in offing.
Recap
In this lecture you have learnt the following: