Earth Ir Cos (Ø) Polarising
The Ir Cos (Ø) operating characteristic is used in similar situations to Wattmetric.
The operating value is defined as the active component of the residual current given by:
Active Earth Current = Residual Current x Cos (Ø)
= (IZPS x 3) x Cos (Ø)
Where Ø is the Fault Angle that is the angle between the VZPS and IZPS phasors.
This feature works in a similar manner to Wattmetric with the following differences.
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The Active Current threshold is adjustable in the range 10 to 1260 A in steps of 1 A with a default value of 40 A.
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Ir Cos (Ø) is the value used to determine whether a fault is present, that is the pickup value.
When Ir Cos (Ø) is selected as the polarising decision for directional EFs, WSOS displays this message:
This is because the Earth Pickup Threshold (Setting Current) is now set in Ir Cos(Ø) units as shown.
Earth Ir Cos (Ø) Characteristic Fault Angle
When a forward EF occurs on a compensated earthing system, VZPS and IZPS are assumed to be 180° out of phase.
Therefore the Characteristic Angle for Ir Cos (Ø) is fixed at 180°.
The Ir Cos (Ø) Fault Angle for a given fault is the Zero Sequence Current angle relative to the Zero Sequence Voltage angle VZPS → IZPS
The Angle at Fault recorded in the Event Log is the fault angle relative to the Characteristic Angle which is fixed at 180°.
So a fault with a Fault Angle (VZPS → IZPS) = 135° would log an Angle at Fault of -45° (135°-180°) which indicates that the fault angle is lagging the Characteristic Angle by 45°.
Other events that are logged for the above fault include:
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Forward Pickup Earth
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Forward Earth Protection Trip
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Angle at Fault -45°
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Quantity at trip Earth/SEF IRCos Ø – xx.xx A
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Polarizing Voltage at trip VZPS
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Quantity at the maximum Earth/SEF – Maximum IRCos Ø - xx.xx A
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Polarizing Voltage at the maximum VZPS
Earth Ir Cos (Ø) Sector Width
The default Forward and Reverse Sector Width settings for earth protection when the Decision is Ir Cos (Ø) are both 90°. These are ± settings and equate to actual sector widths of 180°.
Sector Width settings are identical for all elements and Decision settings. For more information, refer to Sector Width.
Earth Ir Cos (Ø) Low Polarising Voltage Action
In order to determine the direction of an EF that caused a pickup when Ir Cos (Ø) polarization is used, the controller expects Zero Sequence Voltage to be above the Earth Low Threshold setting.
The Earth Low Threshold is one of two settings that deal with low polarising voltages. The other is the Low Polarising Voltage Action.
If the polarising voltage is below the Low Threshold setting for EFs, the Low Polarising Voltage Action setting will determine what action mustbe taken.
The options are:
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Use Forward
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Use Reverse
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No Action (default setting)
More information on the No Action option can be found here.
The Earth Low Threshold setting can be configured for between 15...15,000 Volts.
When Use Forward or Use Reverse actions are selected, a fault with low polarising voltage will cause a trip as though it was a normal fault in the selected direction. The only indication that the polarising voltage was low would be the Polarising Voltage at trip VZPS event which would record a value lower than the Earth Low Threshold setting.
When No Action is selected, an EF with low polarising voltage will cause a pickup followed by a Polarising Voltage Low VZPS event reporting the low value of polarising voltage. It will not cause a protection trip. The pickup condition will remain active until the fault resets.
Earth Ir Cos (Ø) Low Voltage Reset
Once the polarising voltage for EFs has been deemed to be Low, it will not return to Normal until either the fault resets or the measured polarising voltage exceeds the Low Threshold setting by 10%. So if the Low Threshold setting is 500 VZPS and a Low Voltage condition exists, VZPS will have to rise to 550 VZPS before the Low V condition is cancelled.
Earth Ir Cos (Ø) Voltage Memory
When Ir Cos (Ø) is selected as the Decision for directional EFs, a Voltage Memory time between 0.01 s and 10.00 s or OFF can be configured. The default setting is 2.00 s.
Consider a forward EF at the Characteristic Angle with VZPS above the Earth Low Threshold setting and an expected tripping time of 3.5 s. If this fault is applied for 2.0 s and then VZPS drops below the Low Threshold setting, the controller will retain the last VZPS value that was sampled above the threshold for the Voltage Memory time.
This means that the low voltage condition is effectively ignored and the protection trip will still occur in the expected tripping time of 3.5 s.
The memorized voltage and corresponding fault angle will be identified by an asterisk ‘*’.
The Event Log will report the following events:
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Forward Pickup Earth
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Forward Earth Protection Trip
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Angle at Fault* 0°
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Quantity at trip Earth/SEF Ir Cos (Ø) - xx.xx A
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Polarising Voltage at trip* VZPS – 544 V
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Quantity at the maximum Earth/SEF Maximum Ir Cos (Ø) - xx.xx A
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Polarising Voltage at the maximum VZPS – 601 V
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The Angle at Fault and Polarising Voltage at trip events above are identified as memorized values.
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The Polarising Voltage at trip* VZPS would be expected to be just above the Low Threshold setting (default 500 V).
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The Polarising Voltage at the maximum is not a memorized value as VZPS was above the Low Threshold setting when the fault first appeared.
Earth Ir Cos (Ø) Fault Hold Time
When Ir Cos (Ø) is selected as the Decision for directional EFs, a Fault Hold Time between 0.01 s and 10.00 s or OFF can be configured. The default setting is 2.00 s.
The effect of the Fault Hold Time is to pause the protection timing for a set period after a fault that caused a pickup has gone away.
When the fault hold time is 2.00 s, a forward EF with a tripping time of 3.0 s that goes away after 1.5 s for 1.0 s and then returns will cause a trip after another 1.5 s. Because the hold time, that is the time that the fault went away for (1.0 s), is a shorter duration than the Fault Hold Time (2.0 s), the pickup will remain active while protection timing is paused and the tripping time will be extended by the Fault Hold Time setting.
The Event Log will record a Paused event during the hold time. The events recorded from pickup with relevant time stamps would be:
|
Event |
Time Stamp |
|---|---|
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Forward Pickup Earth |
00:00:00.00 |
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All protection elements resetting |
00:00:01.50 |
|
All protection elements paused |
00:00:01.50 |
|
Protection element timing |
00:00:02.50 |
|
Forward Earth Protection Trip |
00:00:04.00 |
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Angle at Fault 0° |
00:00:04.00 |
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Quantity at trip Earth/SEF Ir Cos (Ø) -xx.xx A |
00:00:04.00 |
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Polarising Voltage at trip VZPS |
00:00:04.00 |
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Quantity at the maximum Earth/SEF – Maximum Ir Cos (Ø) –xx.xx A |
11:57:44.392 |
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Polarising Voltage at the maximum VZPS |
11:57:44.392 |
The pickup was paused during the 1.0 s hold time so never reset. When the fault returned a Protection Element Timing event was logged.
The time between pickup and trip would be 4.0 s that is 3.0
s tripping time plus
1.0 s hold time.
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