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5 comments
Associate

Join Date: May 2008
Location: Seoul, Korea
Posts: 34
Good Answers: 1

Partial Discharge

11/04/2009 11:56 PM

Hi,

I am Yeon Ho Yoo from SK E&C in South Korea.

Recently we are working for Middle East Project. Specification calls for the necessity of partial discharge monitoring system for Giant size motors (11 kV application)

I have searched what is partial discharge? why do we need to monitor it? how can we scan it? what do we need to scan it?

Very brief information was found.

Can you spare your valueable time to inform me the following?

- what is partial discharge?

(too long theory is not needed. conceptual knowlege is sufficient.)

- why do we need to scan it? if we do not scan it, what will happen?

- to scan it, what do we need to have and how to use it?

- does such monitoring system also have followed explosion-proof grade based

on motor certified?

- once we have it, where do we have install the sensors and monitors?

are they to be installed locally? or in MCC room?

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Power-User

Join Date: May 2009
Location: Ketchikan, AK, USA
Posts: 437
Good Answers: 18
#1

Re: Partial Discharge

11/05/2009 12:57 AM

I am not sure of what was meant by "partial discharge." (Discharge of what to where?) However, when you posed this question, an advertisement appeared below it:

About Partial Discharge Monitors

Partial discharge monitors are used to monitor partial discharge activities in high voltage equipment such as transformers, on-load tap changers (OTLC), bushings, switchgear and cables. High-voltage transformers convert power-level voltages from one level or phase to another. Transformers that use paper and oil decompose over time, causing the oil to become increasingly saturated with water. Left undetected, partial discharge or corona may occur and cause thermal faults or arcing. OTLCs are often used to control secondary terminal voltage regulation, but can fail due to contact wear, misalignment, overloading, or component fatigue. High-voltage bushings are designed to transfer load currents in and out of grounded enclosures, but are prone to sudden failures. Partial discharge monitors can detect increased capacitance before bushing currents reach unsafe levels. Switchgear interrupts the very high currents caused by fault conditions, but fails at the breaker level. To prevent system failure, partial discharge monitors are used to detect parameters such as mechanism timing, arc duration time, and contact interruption duty. High-voltage cables degrade over time and experience partial discharge when small voids in insulation or terminations flash over internally as the voltage rises and falls during each half cycle. Partial discharge monitors are used to detect tiny pulses of radio frequency (RF) current and correlate these values with the monitored phase.

Selecting partial discharge monitors requires an analysis of specifications, features, and approvals. Product specifications include power input, input correction, range, memory, outputs, dimensions and weight. Maximum pulse, absolute voltage peak, and frequency range are also important input-signal parameters to consider. Environmental conditions include operating temperature, storage temperature, and humidity range. In terms of features, partial discharge monitors may include integral software or use network protocols such as TCP/IP. Remote access can be achieved via a local area network (LAN), supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) system, or Internet connection. Product features also include three-phase measurements, noise rejection by pulse shaping and rise-time detection, individual alert thresholds per phase, and local or remote alerts and alarms. Approvals for a partial discharge monitor include the CE Mark and compliance with specifications such as EN6101-1 for safety and EN61326 for electromagnetic compatibility (EMC).

You might find this to be helpful.

Good Answer (Score 2)
Associate

Join Date: May 2008
Location: Seoul, Korea
Posts: 34
Good Answers: 1
#2
In reply to #1

Re: Partial Discharge

11/05/2009 2:45 AM

Thanks Tornado,

I read your articles several times in here. Again, thanks for your help

Guru
New Zealand - Member - Kiwi Popular Science - Weaponology - New Member Engineering Fields - Power Engineering - New Member Engineering Fields - Electrical Engineering - New Member

Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Auckland, New Zealand
Posts: 2657
Good Answers: 91
#3

Re: Partial Discharge

11/05/2009 1:36 PM
Score 1 for Good Answer
Associate

Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: India
Posts: 25
#4

Re: Partial Discharge

11/06/2009 5:08 AM

Hi,

Pl. go through the following link. May be helpful.

http://www.doble.com/products/partial_discharge_detection.html

Guest
#5

Re: Partial Discharge

11/09/2009 10:14 AM

Try IRIS POWER ENGINEERING from Canada for the information you seek

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