DocumentCode
20071
Title
Get in Step With Synchronization
Author
Ransom, Daniel L.
Author_Institution
Basler Electr. Co., Highland, IL, USA
Volume
50
Issue
6
fYear
2014
fDate
Nov.-Dec. 2014
Firstpage
4210
Lastpage
4215
Abstract
This paper presents a review of power-system synchronization. When two sources are paralleled, it is crucial to close the interconnecting circuit breaker when both sources are in voltage, frequency, and phase coincidence. Operators can synchronize manually, or use the latest, state-of-the-art autosynchronizers (device 25A) and sync-check relays (ANSI/IEEE device 25) to automate closing. Generator and bus synchronization share most principles, with some important differences for each type of synchronization. For generation plants, closing manually or applying an automatic synchronizer depends a lot on the plant configuration and operating mode. For bus-line applications, synchronizing depends on power-system stiffness, motor loads, and whether a wye-delta transformer is between the line and the bus. Methods for attaining proper synch-check and fast synchronization are discussed.
Keywords
circuit breakers; electric generators; power system interconnection; synchronisation; ANSI-IEEE device 25; automatic synchronizer; autosynchronizers; bus synchronization; bus-line applications; generation plants; generator synchronization; interconnecting circuit breaker; motor loads; operating mode; plant configuration; power system stiffness; power system synchronization; sync-check relays; wye-delta transformer; Circuit breakers; Frequency synchronization; Generators; Power systems; Relays; Synchronization; Voltage control; Closing; frequency; phase; protective relays; sync check; synchronization; synchronizer; voltage;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Industry Applications, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0093-9994
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TIA.2014.2346698
Filename
6874543
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