HenryOhm
Electrical
- Jun 22, 2005
- 60
All,
I am on a project where the systems integrator is proposing an AVR trip for generator short circuit rather than generator OCPD trip. I am concerned about the implications for arc flash incident energies and the time it would take for:
1) the control system to recognize the fault, communicate it through to the AVR and for the AVR to trip its output,
2) the time it would take for the smaller field to decay on the external side of the brushless exciter and
3) the time for the internal field inside the brushless exciter to decay to translate to decay in armature voltage feeding the fault.
I believe that the first is the shortest and the last is the longest, so I am focused primarily on T'do. I am assuming that as the external field on the brushless exciter decays, that the rotating rectifier begins to shunt the decaying internal field somewhat similar to how T'do is determined by test with the armature open circuit. How would one estimate the voltage collapse under short circuit from such an AVR trip and would T'do still give one a sense for the delay in the armature voltage collapse?
Thanks in advance for any help.
P.S. I already have MG Say's "Alternating Current Machines" and Ion Boldea's "Synchronous Generators" if the answer is already right under my nose.
I am on a project where the systems integrator is proposing an AVR trip for generator short circuit rather than generator OCPD trip. I am concerned about the implications for arc flash incident energies and the time it would take for:
1) the control system to recognize the fault, communicate it through to the AVR and for the AVR to trip its output,
2) the time it would take for the smaller field to decay on the external side of the brushless exciter and
3) the time for the internal field inside the brushless exciter to decay to translate to decay in armature voltage feeding the fault.
I believe that the first is the shortest and the last is the longest, so I am focused primarily on T'do. I am assuming that as the external field on the brushless exciter decays, that the rotating rectifier begins to shunt the decaying internal field somewhat similar to how T'do is determined by test with the armature open circuit. How would one estimate the voltage collapse under short circuit from such an AVR trip and would T'do still give one a sense for the delay in the armature voltage collapse?
Thanks in advance for any help.
P.S. I already have MG Say's "Alternating Current Machines" and Ion Boldea's "Synchronous Generators" if the answer is already right under my nose.