Gas Insulated Substations. Группа авторов. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Группа авторов
Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
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Жанр произведения: Техническая литература
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781119623618
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book is based on the tutorial and panel sessions presented by the subject matter experts (SME) of gas‐insulated substations in the working group K2 of the Institute of Electronics and Electrical Engineer (IEEE) Substations Committee. Gas‐insulated substations (GIS), for alternative current (AC) were invented in the early 1960s with the first projects in the mid‐1960s in the United States and Europe. In Japan, research and development for GIS started from 1963 followed by the practical application of 84 kV GIS (1968).

      With thousands of installed bays, of GIS today, we can look back to a wide range of experiences gained in very different cases of applications.

      The IEEE Substations Committee created the GIS Subcommittee K0 more than twenty‐five years ago and since then this subcommittee has continuously worked on standards and guides in the field of GIS technology and application. About twenty‐five standards and guides related to the GIS have been published to‐date, with continuous revision work in progress on all documents and preparation of new documents.

      Around the year 2000, the SME of the GIS Subcommittee started to collect information on GIS and developed a tutorial on Gas‐Insulated Substations (GIS) and Transmission Lines (GIL). This working group is numbered as K2 in the GIS Subcommittee and continually works to come up with new tutorials on different subjects associated with GIS.

      1.1.1 Organization

      IEEE PES Substations Committee has five subcommittees. Three subcommittees are for transmission and distribution (T&D) substations in physical electrical design (D0), physical civil design (E0), and grounding lightning (G0). One subcommittee for power electronic in T&D substations and one for gas‐insulated switchgear (GIS) (K0). For the scope of the subcommittees, see Table 1.1. The administrative substation committee (B0) is represented by the chair, vice‐chair, secretary, past‐chair and holds subcommittees for transactions editor, awards (H0), standards (S0), and meetings (M0).

D0: Transmission and distribution substation design for a medium‐voltage substation in the range of 1 kV up to and including 52 kV and a high‐voltage substation above 52 kV
E0: Transmission and distribution of substation operations for medium‐voltage substations in the range of 1 kV up to and including 52 kV and high‐voltage substations for above kV
G0: Transmission and distribution of substation grounding and lightning
I0: High‐voltage power electronics stations for DC equipment above 1.5 kV to be installed in a substation or converter station like AC/DC converters, coils, filters, grounding, and software for control and protection
K0: Gas‐insulated substations for AC high‐voltage equipment above 1 kV of switchgear, disconnectors, and ground switches (GIS) and power transmission (GIL)

      The physical civil design subcommittee E0 is active in six working groups on Community Acceptance of Substations E1 (IEEE 1127), Oil Spill prevention to the substation soil E2 (IEEE 980), Fire Protection E3 (IEEE 979), Animal Deterrents E5 (IEEE 1264), Measuring Earth Resistivity, Ground Impedance, Earth Surface Potentials of a Grounding System E6 (IEEE 81), and Electric Power Substation Physical and Electronic Security E7 (IEEE 1402).

Schematic illustration of organization of the Substations Committee.

      The power electronic equipment subcommittee is active in seven working groups. I1 is responsible for two guides, the Functional Specification of Medium Voltage (1–35 kV) Electronic Series Devices for Compensation of Voltage Fluctuations (IEEE 1585) and Electronic Shunt Devices for Dynamic Voltage Compensation (IEEE 1623). For Specifying Thyristor‐Controlled Series Capacitors, working group I2 is responsible. The Functional Specification of Transmission Static Var Compensators (IEEE 1031) and the Field Tests of Static Var Compensators (IEEE 1303) are in the scope of working group I4. The Specification of Transmission Static Synchronous Compensator (STATCOM) Systems (IEEE 1052) is covered by I5; for Control Architecture for High Power Electronics (1 MW and Greater) Used in Electric Power Transmission and Distribution Systems (IEEE 1676), working group I8; for Specification of Transmission Static Synchronous Compensator (STATCOM) Systems (IEEE 1052), working group I9; and for Qualifying Permanent Connections Used in Substation Grounding (IEEE 837), working group I10 are responsible.

      The gas insulated switchgear and switchgear assemblies subcommittee covers 13 standards and has 5 more upcoming activities. For High‐Voltage Gas‐Insulated Substations Rated Above 52 kV (IEEE C37.122), K1 is responsible. In K2, GIS Tutorials and Panel Sessions are prepared and presented at IEEE conferences. These tutorials and panels are the basis for this GIS Handbook. K3 is active on the Application of Gas‐Insulated Substations 1–52 kV (IEEE C37.122.2), K4 on SF6 Gas handling (IEEE C37.122.3), K5 on the Gas Insulated Transmission Line (GIL) Application Guide (IEEE C37.122.4), K7 on SF6 to air Bushings for GIS (IEEE C37.017), K8 for the Moisture content in SF6 used in GIS (IEEE C37.122.5), and K9 on Interfaces to GIS (IEEE C37.122.6). Working group K10 is responsible for this GIS Handbook. K11 is active on the GIS User Guide (C37.122.1), K12 on the GIS Specification (IEEE C37.123), and K13 on Medium Voltage GIS for Voltages above 1 kV and up to 52 kV (IEEE C37.20.9).

      There are six new standardization activities in the K subcommittee now in work. K14 Condition Assessment of GIS (future IEEE C37.122.9), K15 Recommended Practice of Field Test for GIS (future IEEE C37.122.7), K16 Panel Session on Advanced Sensors for GIS, K17 Panels Session for Physical Security and Resilience, K18 Mobile GIS Applications (future C37.122.8). The main content of this new standards is already covered in the second edition of this GIS Handbook.

      1.1.2 Experts of K2 and Location of Tutorial Presentations