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A study of the electrical environment below HVDC transmission lines.

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Date

2008

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Abstract

The main aim of this project was to determine the extent to which the study of electric fields and ions in a laboratory can be used to study the electrical environment below High Voltage Direct Current (HVDC) transmission lines. The focus of the study was to set up small scale laboratory experiments and to compare these results to actual line measurements and to software simulations. The laboratory tests were undertaken at the HVDC Centre at the University of KwaZulu-Natal (Westville Campus). The software simulations that were conducted as part of this study were done using EPRI TL 3.0 and Microsoft Excel. Initially tests conducted were the measurement of the induced voltage and corona leakage current on a floating object. The next set of laboratory tests conducted was the measurement of ion current density and the electric field at ground level. The ion current density was measured with a Wilson Plate (lm2) and the electric field at ground level was measured using a JCI static monitor field meter (JCI 140) and a Monroe (257D) Portable Electrostatic Fieldmeter, with an elevated earth plane. Measurements of ion current density and electric field at ground level were also taken under an operating HVDC transmission line (Cahora Bassa to Apollo), in order to compare the laboratory measurements and simulations with real line measurements. The results have shown that the electrical parameters (i.e. ion current, induced voltages, corona currents, electric field, ion density, space charge) are higher under the negative pole as compared to the positive pole. The results of the laboratory measurements show that the ion currents under the negative polarity are almost double the ion currents that were measured under positive polarity, while the electric field under negative polarity was 20 percent higher than under positive polarity. Measurements of the electric field show that the total electric field below the line is greatly enhanced when corona generated space charge is present. The results of the EPRI TL Workstation simulations show good correlation with the EXCEL® simulations. However, there was poor correlation between EPRI simulations and test line measurements in the laboratory. The EPRI simulations show good correlation to the measured electric field values below the Cahora Bassa line. The comparison between the actual measurements on the test line and the Cahora Bassa line showed poor correlation and this was attributed to factors such as scaling, laboratory size constraints, ion concentration in laboratory, line loading and wind speeds.

Description

Thesis (M.Sc.Eng.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2008.

Keywords

Electric lines., Electric power distribution--Direct current., Theses--Electrical engineering.

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