DocumentCode :
71157
Title :
HTS Wire Consumption Reduction in a Coil With an Actively Controllable Magnetic Core for a Fault Current Controller
Author :
Min Cheol Ahn ; Jae Young Jang ; Tae Kuk Ko
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Kunsan Nat. Univ., Kunsan, South Korea
Volume :
23
Issue :
3
fYear :
2013
fDate :
Jun-13
Firstpage :
5604004
Lastpage :
5604004
Abstract :
For an effective fault current management in a smart grid, a fault current controller (FCC) has been proposed and actively developed. A previous attempt to reduce the superconducting wire consumption in a high-temperature superconducting coil for the FCC was to use a reversely magnetized core (RMC) using permanent magnets. Despite the previous study being effective to shorten the wire, there were some potential drawbacks: a demagnetization of the permanent magnets and uncontrollability. In the smart grid with renewable sources, a nominal line current can be time-varying, so a reverse bias point should not be fixed. Therefore, an actively controllable RMC is required. In this paper, an electromagnet was applied for a source of RMC. A reverse-bias point was actively adjusted by taking account of time-varying line current. This proposed bias method could reduce wire consumption. With optimal reverse bias current, the effective inductance was 4.3 times larger than that of the air core case. If we want to make the same inductance without RMC, wire consumption should be more than 2.07 times. This proposed method was so effective to apply to the distribution class FCC, which is our final target.
Keywords :
demagnetisation; electric current control; high-temperature superconductors; inductance; magnetic cores; permanent magnets; smart power grids; superconducting coils; superconducting fault current limiters; HTS wire consumption reduction; actively controllable RMC; actively controllable magnetic core; bias method; demagnetization; distribution class FCC; electromagnet; fault current controller; fault current management; high-temperature superconducting coil; inductance; permanent magnets; renewable sources; reverse bias current; reverse bias point; reversely magnetized core; smart grid; superconducting wire consumption; time-varying line current; Coils; Fault currents; High-temperature superconductors; Inductance; Inductors; Magnetic cores; Wires; Actively controllable magnetic core; fault current controller; reversely magnetized bias coil;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1051-8223
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TASC.2013.2249551
Filename :
6471187
Link To Document :
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