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Méthodes de calcul et économies réalisables dans la construction des fondations de lignes à haute tension et des lignes d'électrification des réseaux ferrésSariban, Alexandre January 1950 (has links)
Doctorat en sciences appliquées / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
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Capillary absorption as an audible noise reduction scheme for UHV transmission lines.Tong, David Woo-Sang January 1975 (has links)
Thesis. 1975. Ph.D.--Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. / Vita. / Includes bibliographical references. / Ph.D.
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High voltage direct current strategy solving power delivery shortages to localized area of national gridSmith, Johan January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (MTech (Electrical Engineering))--Cape Peninsula University of Technology, 2009 / The industrial and population growth of a nation can cause power delivery problems to
localized areas of a national grid through their increased demand for electrical energy. One
reason for these power shortages is the insufficient current carrying capacity of existing high
voltage alternating current, (HVAC), transmission lines supplying the area. High voltage
direct current (HVDC) transmission lines are a possible solution as they provide better power
delivery than HVAC lines.
New or upgraded HVAC lines, or HVDC lines or combinations of HVAC and HVDC lines are
possible solutions to improve power delivery. This research investigates the various line
possibilities using theory. and cutting edge frequency and time domain software tools. The
challenge is how to approach this problem. What methodology or structure should be used?
Thus one of the contributions of this work is the development of a strategy (flow chart), for
solving power delivery problems to localized areas of a national grid through individual or
combinations (e.g. parallel operation) of HVAC and/or HVDC transmission lines. The main
contribution is the evaluation of a HVDC system as a solution to overcoming power delivery
shortages to a localized area of a national grid.
Three different software packages (two industrial and one academic) namely,
PSCAD/EMTDC (time domain), DlgSILENT PowerFactory (frequency domain) and MathCAD
software are evaluated for their capability to perform the simulation studies necessary to
prove the possible solutions given in the developed flow chart. The PSCAD/EMTDC software
package is evaluated for integrated HVAC/HVDC load flow analyses, DlgSILENT for
individual and parallel combinations of HVAC lines and MathCAD to prove hand calculations
to software results.
Five case studies are conducted. The first case study demonstrates a healthy system with no
delivery shortcomings, the second case study portrays the delivery shortcoming due to
increased localized area demand, and the remaining three case studies explore possible
solutions to solve the problem. The first possible solution is to construct an identical HVAC
line in parallel to the existing line.
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Harmonic analysis and effectiveness of mitigation techniques applied to a bipolar HVDC systemMushagala, Jimmy Matabaro January 2017 (has links)
Thesis (MTech (Electrical Engineering))--Cape Peninsula University of Technology, 2017. / High Voltage Direct Current (HVDC) transmission is a safe and efficient technology designed to deliver large amounts of electrical power over long distances with minimal losses and at low costs. HVDC links require converters and filters at both terminal stations. The core component of the HVDC system is the power converter that connects the DC and AC systems together. The conversion from AC to DC, and vice versa, is achieved mainly through electronic switches called thyristors. The thyristor-based Line Commutated Converter (LCC) is a mature and trusted technology for HVDC transmission throughout the world.
HVDC converters are bidirectional and can function in either rectification (AC to DC) or inversion mode (DC to AC). This is achieved when the voltage polarity across the converter gets swapped by the controllers, because current cannot change its direction in thyristors.
In this thesis an analytical model of the HVDC converters is developed in the frequency domain by modelling it in DIgSILENT. The objective is to study the harmonics induced to the AC side from HVDC converters. Therefore, it is important in the real world to understand the principles, what causes harmonics to be generated in HVDC and transferred to the HVAC system.
The objective of this thesis is to investigate the effectiveness of mitigation techniques used, on how they reduce harmonics by keeping these harmonic levels within specified values admissible by international standards (e.g. IEEE, etc).
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Seasonal Patterns of Melatonin, Cortisol, and Progesterone Secretion in Female Lambs Raised Beneath a 500-kV Transmission LineLee, Jack Monroe, Jr. 01 January 1992 (has links)
There is ongoing controversy about the possibility of adverse biological effects from environmental exposures to electric and magnetic fields. These fields are produced by all electrical equipment and appliances including electrical transmission lines. The objective of this environmental science study was to investigate the possible effects of a high voltage transmission line on domestic sheep (Ovis aries L,), a species that can often be found near such lines. The study was primarily designed to determine whether a specific effect of electric and magnetic fields found in laboratory animals also occurs in livestock under natural environmental conditions. The effect is the ability of fields, at levels found in the environment, to significantly depress the normally high nocturnal concentrations of the pineal hormone melatonin. Melatonin mediates the reproductive response to changes in photoperiod in seasonal breeders such as sheep. Factors which modify the production of nocturnal melatonin in sheep can have important effects on the timing of seasonal reproduction including the onset of puberty in this species. Ten female Suffolk lambs were penned for 10 months directly beneath a 500-kV transmission line near Estacada, Oregon. Ten other lambs of the same type were penned in a control area away from the transmission line where electric and magnetic fields were at ambient levels. Serum melatonin was analyzed by radioimmunoassay (RIA) from 6618 blood samples collected at 0.5 to 3-hour intervals over eight 48-hour periods. Serum progesterone was analyzed by RIA from blood samples collected twice weekly beginning when the lambs were 23 weeks old. This hormone was used to measure the onset of puberty. Serum cortisol was also assayed by RIA from the blood samples collected during the 48-hour samples. This was done to assess whether exposure to the transmission line produced stress in the growing lambs. Other supplemental biological data collected included body weight gain, wool growth, and behavior. An extensive study was conducted by engineers from the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) to measure electric and magnetic fields and noise to which the lambs were exposed. This was accomplished by installing permanent monitors near both the control and line pens. Results showed that lambs in both the control and line groups had the typical pattern of melatonin secretion consisting of low daytime and high nighttime serum concentrations. There were no statistically significant differences between groups in melatonin levels, or in the phase or duration of the nighttime melatonin elevation. Age at puberty and number of reproductive cycles also did not differ between groups. Serum cortisol showed a circadian rhythm with highest concentrations during the day. Cortisol concentrations also seemed to reflect effects of known stressors on livestock, e.g., weaning, introduction to new housing, and vehicle transport. There were, however, no differences in cortisol concentrations between groups. Statistical analyses on other biological parameters revealed no differences between groups for body weight gain, wool growth, or behavior. The electrical monitoring program verified that the line group lambs were exposed to electric and magnetic fields at levels typical of those found beneath commercial 500-kV transmission lines. In summary, the large effect of electric and magnetic fields on melatonin concentrations reported in laboratory animals was not observed in this study of sheep.
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Extra high voltage transmission corridor siting: technical, public, institutional and regulatory considerationsCrnojacki, Zorica 03 October 2007 (has links)
Extra High Voltage (EHV) transmission corridor siting studies are complex and costly procedures, which are often prolonged by technical, public, institutional, and state regulatory factors. The primary goal of this research is to contribute to a more predictable and expedient siting study. The following objectives are accomplished:
- Exploration and description of technical and methodological aspects of siting in terms of the general approach to the siting study, impact assessment techniques, data collection and mapping considerations.
- Exploration and description of the following public and institutional considerations in the siting study: public participation, active opposition, media coverage, attitudes of affected agencies, and communication among involved organizations. Determination of the effects of these considerations on the siting process.
- Review and evaluation of the state siting regulations in terms of: clarity of requirements, technical siting requirements, coordination of actions in the study, coordination with other relevant regulations, and public and agency participation in the study. Identification of the effects of the state regulations on the siting study process.
- Development of guidelines for improved EHV transmission corridor siting studies.
The principal methodology of the research is the single case study of Wyoming-Cloverdale 765 kV siting project, which represents a model of a contemporary, interstate, EHV siting study. The results of the case study are complemented by the review of state siting regulations and the literature.
The major outcome of the research are the guidelines for improved corridor siting studies. The guidelines are developed for corridor siting study consultants, electric utility companies, and state regulatory commissions.
Findings of the research indicate that technical, public, institutional, and state regulatory factors interactively affect the process of the corridor siting study. Furthermore, the siting study has dominant political overtones, and as such cannot be treated as a merely technical project. Public opposition to new EHV transmission lines can significantly increase the effects of technical, public, institutional, and regulatory deficiencies, reducing the probability of line approval.
The testing of the guidelines in siting study practice, and a multiple case study research dealing with the same considerations and their interactions, are suggested for future research. / Ph. D.
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Computer relaying for EHV/UHV transmission linesYang, Lifeng 21 October 2005 (has links)
As the power systems grow, system connections become more complex. Due to cost and environmental concern, more and more parallel lines and series compensated lines may be installed in the system. In order to efficiently use the transmission network, more nonlinear flexible devices such as the phase shifter and the advanced compensation system will be put into use. Once a fault occurs on such a system, a delay in clearing the fault is usually not permissive. This requires a new generation of relays which have high security and dependability and high operating speed. With the advent of high speed microprocessor and fiber optic communication technologies, it is possible to develop high performance relays. In this dissertation, a new generation of pilot relays and non-pilot relays were developed for a transmission line.
The pilot relays include the instantaneous percentage current differential (IPD), the phase comparison and the phasor based percentage current differential (PPD) principles. In the pilot protections the synchronized phasor measurement techniques are employed and digital CT saturation detectors are incorporated. All these schemes in primary protections feature charging current (or shunt current ) compensation. The phasor based principles are designed to work within one and a half cycles; while others based on sample by sample comparison are assumed to work in less than a cycle.
The non-pilot relays to be investigated in this dissertation include the fault location based and phase angle based directional distance relays. One cycle data window is used in the phasor calculation. Both the distance relays are assumed to make a trip decision in about one and a half cycles.
All algorithms were simulated against different fault conditions using EMTP outputs. The simulation results show all the pilot relay algorithms work well for EHV IUHV transmission lines including the series compensated lines. The fault location based distance relay works well in most cases, but it may give a wrong decision for the close-in fault with the fault resistance and may have a singularity problem. The phase angle based distance relay works very well for different fault conditions and is insensitive to fault resistance.
The modified phase angle based distance relay was also developed for the series compensated line. It would not lose the direction for faults with or without fault resistance, either for a compensated system in forward direction, or in an adjacent line in reverse direction. The overreach is within 20% of the protected zone. This relay algorithm is also based on the one-cycle data window DFT, and it can give a reliable trip decision in about two cycles.
All pilot relays with a fiber optic link and the phase angle based distance relay can constitute a new generation of protection systems for EHV IUHV transmission lines. / Ph. D.
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Particle contamination of high voltage DC insulators.Horenstein, Mark Nathan January 1978 (has links)
Thesis. 1978. Ph.D.--Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. / MICROFICHE COPY AVAILABLE IN ARCHIVES AND ENGINEERING. / Bibliography: leaves 248-250. / Ph.D.
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Planning of low voltage distribution system with integration of PV sources and storage means : case of power system of Cambodia / Planification du réseau de distribution basse tension avec intégration de sources photovoltaïques et stockage : cas du réseau du CambodgeVai, Vannak 27 September 2017 (has links)
La consommation d'énergie augmente d'année en année en raison de la croissance de la population et des conditions économiques. Afin de répondre aux besoins de la population et de la société d'utiliser l'électricité, le Gouvernement Cambodgien a mis en place la politique de promotion et d'encouragement du développement de l’électrification ; tous les villages auront de l'électricité d'ici 2020 et au moins 70% des domiciles auront accès à la bonne qualité du réseau électrique d'ici 2030. Pour réussir ces objectifs, l'étude et le développement de la méthodologie du réseau de distribution basse tension (BT) sont étudiés. Cette thèse étudie la planification du réseau de distribution BT avec intégration de Photovoltaïque (PV) et de stockage d’énergie de batterie (BES). La première partie est développée la méthode de planification à long terme pour tacler le défi de l'incertitude sur la charge en zone urbaine ;le nouvel algorithme a été développé pour rechercher l'architecture optimale de minimisation du coût d’investissement (CAPEX) et d’exploitation (OPEX) qui respecte l'ensemble de contraintes topologies et électriques (courant et tension) grâce à la programmation linéaire mixte en nombres entiers à contraintes quadratiques (PLMNECQ), le plus court chemin , first-fit bin-packing, et la méthode de Monte-Carlo. La deuxième partie est traité de l'extension de la zone de couverture de l'électricité avec deux solutions possibles, sont le renforcement du réseau et l'intégration de PV-BES pour le village rural ; l'algorithme génétique (GA) et la technique itérative ont été codés pour rechercher l’emplacement et la capacité. La dernière partie du travail est concentrée sur la planification du réseau de distribution résidentielle BT pour les zones non électrifiées aux rural et urbain grâce à l'architecture optimale et l'intégration de PV-BES sur l'horizon de planification. / The energy consumption is increasing year by year due to the growth of population and the economic conditions. In order to meet the need of population and society to use electricity, the Cambodian government has established the policy to promote and encourage the development of electrification; all the villages will have electricity by the year 2020, and at least 70% of households will have access to grid quality by the year 2030. To achieve these goals, the study and development of methodology on the Low-Voltage (LV) distribution system are investigated. This thesis studies the planning of LV distribution system with integration of Photovoltaic (PV) and Battery Energy Storage (BES). The first part is developed the long-term planning method to tackle the challenge of load demand uncertainty in urban area; the novel algorithm was developed to search for the optimal architecture of minimizing the capital expenditure (CAPEX) and the operation expenditure (OPEX) which respects to the set of topology and electrical (current and voltage) thank to mixed integer quadratically constrained programming (MIQCP), shortest-path, first-fit bin-packing, and Monte-Carlo method. The second part is dealt with the extension of electricity coverage area with two possible solutions which are grid reinforcement and integration of PV-BES for rural village; the Genetic algorithm (GA) and iterative technique were coded to search for location and sizing. The last part is concentrated on the planning of residential low-voltage distribution system in both rural and urban for non-electrified area thanks to the optimal architecture and PV-BES integration over the planning horizon.
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Alterações topológicas para reduzir a propagação de falhas na rede elétrica de alta tensão brasileira / Topological changes to prevent failure propagation on the Brazilian power transmission linesPaiva, William Roberto de, 1986- 24 August 2018 (has links)
Orientadores: André Franceshi de Angelis, José Geraldo Pena de Andrade / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Faculdade de Tecnologia / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-24T15:13:51Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1
Paiva_WilliamRobertode_M.pdf: 3222455 bytes, checksum: 4ba3e5407135ec1d8483e94ec4c11749 (MD5)
Previous issue date: 2014 / Resumo: Neste trabalho, propõe-se a avaliação de quatro métodos que possam melhorar a resiliência de redes de alta tensão através da adição de linhas de transmissão, utilizando-se a Teoria das Redes Complexas. Criou-se um modelo da rede brasileira de geração e transmissão de energia elétrica em forma de grafo para testar os métodos. O primeiro deles consiste em ligar pares de vértices que possuam menor grau em toda a rede. O segundo liga os vértices de menor betweenness. O terceiro efetua ligações entre pares de vértices de menor grau que estejam ligados aos vértices de maior carga em toda a rede. O último, faz ligações entre os dois vértices de betweenness mediano. Todos os métodos foram testados com e sem o auxílio do procedimento "min-cut", capaz de identificar as arestas que, ao serem removidas, dividem a rede em duas sub-redes, permitindo assim efetuar ligações que reduzam o risco dessa divisão. Além dos testes no modelo da rede brasileira, utilizaram-se também 1000 redes Scale-Free e 1000 aleatórias para verificar o aumento de eficiência trazidos. Todos os métodos foram capazes de aumentar a eficiência, tanto no modelo da rede real quanto nos modelos artificiais. A estratégia de ligar os vértices de betweenness mediano com auxílio do min-cut trouxe o maior aumento. A resiliência da rede, diante de falhas planejadas e falhas aleatórias, foi aumentada em poucos casos, porém, em nenhum houve redução da mesma. Conclui-se que as estratégias propostas podem ser utilizadas para melhorar a eficiência de redes de alta tensão, mantendo ou aumentando sua resiliência, bem como podem ser usadas para trazer os mesmos atributos para redes complexas em geral / Abstract: In this work we purpose to assess four methods to improve high-voltage networks resilience against failures and attacks, using the Complex Network Theory to do it. To test these methods, we created a network model in graph format, based on the Brazilian generation and transmission electrical network. The first of these methods consist in to link pairs of nodes which have the lowest degree in the network. The second creates a link betweenn the lowest betweenness nodes. The third method is to link the two lowest degree nodes which are linked to the highest load nodes. The last one creates a link betweenn the two nodes which has the median betweenness. All methods were tested with and without the use of the "min-cut" procedure. This procedure finds the lowest number of necessary links that, when removed, divide the network in two sub-networks. It allows us to identify these links and reduce the risk of this partitioning the network by adding new links. We also test the strategies in 1000 artificial Scale-Free networks and 1000 artificial Random networks to validate those methods. All strategies were able to increase efficiency, in the real and artificial networks models. The strategy which links the median betweenness nodes using the "min-cut" procedure brought the best results. The network resilience against planned and random failures was increased in in few cases, but no decreases was registered. We conclude that our strategies can be used to improve high-voltage network efficiency, keeping or improving its resilience, as they can be used to bring the same attribute to any type of complex networks / Mestrado / Tecnologia e Inovação / Mestre em Tecnologia
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