cesgibis
Electrical
- Jan 21, 2003
- 26
Hi,
When an internal fault occurs in a high impedance differential protection (whether REF or bus bar),the voltage across the relay can reach high levels, because the CTs are supposed to force their secondary currents into the high impedance branch.
1) But does this push the CTs into early and very quick saturation, the burden of the CTs being very high in this case ?
2) and when in saturation, normally the output of the CTs is close to zero. so how does the relay trip of no current is generated by the CTs. Also a saturated CT has a very low magnetising reactance (close to a short circuit) so the voltage across the High impedance module is non-existant. So how does it trip ?
Thanks for your assistance in understanding this.
When an internal fault occurs in a high impedance differential protection (whether REF or bus bar),the voltage across the relay can reach high levels, because the CTs are supposed to force their secondary currents into the high impedance branch.
1) But does this push the CTs into early and very quick saturation, the burden of the CTs being very high in this case ?
2) and when in saturation, normally the output of the CTs is close to zero. so how does the relay trip of no current is generated by the CTs. Also a saturated CT has a very low magnetising reactance (close to a short circuit) so the voltage across the High impedance module is non-existant. So how does it trip ?
Thanks for your assistance in understanding this.