Theory Of Operation; Directional Principle; Current Directional Protection - GE G30 Instruction Manual

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8 THEORY OF OPERATION

8 THEORY OF OPERATION 8.1DIRECTIONAL PRINCIPLE
For better security, the G30 uses the current directional protection principle to dynamically supervise the main current differ-
ential function. The directional principle is in effect permanently for low differential currents (region 1 in the Two Regions of
Differential Characteristic figure) and is switched on dynamically for large differential currents (region 2 in the same figure)
by the saturation detector (see the Saturation Detector section) upon detecting CT saturation.
The directional principle responds to a relative direction of the fault currents. This means that a reference signal, such as
transformer
voltage, is not required. The directional principle declares that
if all of the fault currents flow in one direction, the fault is internal, or
if at least one fault current flows in an opposite direction compared with the sum of the remaining currents, the fault is
external.
The directional principle is implemented in two stages.
First, based on the magnitude of a given current, it is determined whether the current is a fault current. If so, its relative
phase relation has to be considered. The angle check must not be initiated for the load currents as the direction will be out
transformer
of the
even during internal faults. The auxiliary comparator of this stage applies an adaptable threshold. The
threshold is a fraction of the restraining current. The current from a particular feeder is used for bus directional comparison
if its magnitude is greater than
Second, for – and only for – the selected fault currents, the phase angle between a given current and the sum of all the
remaining currents is checked. The sum of all the remaining currents is the differential current less the current under con-
sideration. Therefore, for each, say the pth, current to be considered, the angle between the
checked.
Ideally, during external faults, the said angle is close to 180° (see below); and during internal faults - close to 0 degrees.
Figure 8–1: DIRECTIONAL PRINCIPLE OPERATION DURING EXTERNAL FAULTS
Figure 8–2: DIRECTIONAL PRINCIPLE OPERATION DURING INTERNAL FAULTS
The G30 implementation calculates the maximum angle for the considered currents and compares it against a fixed thresh-
old of 90°. The flag indicating whether the directional protection principle is satisfied is available as the FlexLogic operand
XFMR PCNT DIFF DIR A/B/C.
GE Multilin
0.2 ×
I
or it is greater than 2 times its CT rating.
restraint
External Fault Conditions
I
p
imag
I
I
OPERATE
D
p
BLOCK
I
- I
D
p
BLOCK
OPERATE
Internal Fault Conditions
I
p
imag
I
I
D
p
BLOCK
BLOCK
G30 Generator Protection System

8.1 DIRECTIONAL PRINCIPLE

8.1.1 CURRENT DIRECTIONAL PROTECTION

I
p
real
I
I
I
D
p
p
836726A2.CDR
OPERATE
I
p
I
- I
real
D
p
I
I
D
p
I
p
OPERATE
836727A2.CDR
I
and
I
I
phasors is to be
P
D
P
8-1
8

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