Dissertation
APPLICATION OF FINITE DIFFERENCE TIME DOMAIN AND FOURIER ENHANCED CHARGE SIMULATION METHODS TO IMPROVE SWITCHING OVERVOLTAGE ANALYSIS IN SUPPORT OF A UNIFIED APPROACH FOR ELECTRICAL DESIGN OF HIGH VOLTAGE TRANSMISSION LINES BASED ON THE ELECTRIC FIELD
Washington State University
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD), Washington State University
01/2021
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.7273/000005492
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/2376/119693
Abstract
Recent research relating high-voltage transmission line electric field spatial uniformity to transmission line power capacity and switching overvoltage susceptibility underscored the need for a better method to calculate critical flashover voltage and the need for better overvoltage data to quantify insulation margins for transmission design. This dissertation includes two manuscripts documenting research addressing these needs. Research in the first manuscript extends the finite-difference time-domain method with dynamic corona losses to multiphase transmission lines with bundled subconductors. The model is adapted for practical use in high-volume statistical transient simulation. Results highlight the importance of considering detailed overvoltage profiles and accounting for corona losses when seeking to carefully quantify insulation design margins. The second manuscript reports development of a new method for efficient computation of three-dimensional electric fields due to high-voltage transmission lines and nearby space charge modeled as a finite group of point charges. The approach is based on the charge simulation method and uses Fourier principles to discretize conductor charge densities and reduce matrix inversion computations. Analysis of three-phase transmission lines with multiple subconductors per phase can have more than a hundredfold reduction in computational burden compared to typical charge simulation methods performed entirely in the spatial domain. This improvement allows subconductors to be modeled individually, giving greater flexibility to experiment with simulated bundle configurations. The method is used to model the phase-to-phase breakdown process between bundled conductors in high voltage transmission lines. The model includes leader and streamer space charge and all image charge effects. Analysis using the method demonstrates that switching impulse critical flashover voltage can be estimated based on the ability of the leader-streamer system to survive minimum electric field conditions during propagation between electrodes. This means that it is often unnecessary to model complete bridging of the air gap to estimate critical flashover voltage. A practical design example of a cross rope suspension transmission structure demonstrates the effectiveness of the method for ongoing research into a more cohesive approach for electrical design of transmission lines using the correlation between electric field spatial nonuniformity, transmission line power capacity, and switching overvoltage susceptibility.
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Details
- Title
- APPLICATION OF FINITE DIFFERENCE TIME DOMAIN AND FOURIER ENHANCED CHARGE SIMULATION METHODS TO IMPROVE SWITCHING OVERVOLTAGE ANALYSIS IN SUPPORT OF A UNIFIED APPROACH FOR ELECTRICAL DESIGN OF HIGH VOLTAGE TRANSMISSION LINES BASED ON THE ELECTRIC FIELD
- Creators
- Jon T Leman
- Contributors
- Robert G Olsen (Advisor)Robert G Olsen (Committee Member)Patrick D Pedrow (Advisor)Patrick D Pedrow (Committee Member)John B Schneider (Committee Member)Saeed Lotfifard (Committee Member)
- Awarding Institution
- Washington State University
- Academic Unit
- School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
- Theses and Dissertations
- Doctor of Philosophy (PhD), Washington State University
- Publisher
- Washington State University
- Number of pages
- 153
- Identifiers
- 99900592362001842
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Dissertation