4.6 Article

Non-Unit Protection for HVDC Grids: An Analytical Approach for Wavelet Transform-Based Schemes

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON POWER DELIVERY
Volume 36, Issue 5, Pages 2634-2645

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TPWRD.2020.3024818

Keywords

HVDC transmission; Circuit faults; Frequency-domain analysis; Voltage measurement; Transient analysis; Inductors; Wavelet transforms; DC grid protection; frequency domain analysis; HVDC grids; non-unit protection; wavelet transform

Funding

  1. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) Centre forDoctoral Training in Future Power Networks and Smart Grids [EP/L015471/1]

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This paper proposes a non-unit protection solution for DC fault protection in HVDC grids, based on frequency domain analysis and Wavelet Transform, offering high speed, general applicability, and immunity to system changes and external disturbances.
Speed and selectivity of DC fault protection are critical for High-Voltage DC (HVDC) grids and present significant technical and economic challenges. Therefore, this paper proposes a non-unit protection solution that detects and discriminates DC faults based on frequency domain analysis of the transient period of DC faults. The representation of a generic HVDC grid section and the corresponding DC-side fault signatures in the frequency domain form the basis of a generalized approach for analytically designing a protection scheme based on Wavelet Transform (WT). The proposed solution is adaptive within its design stage and offers general applicability and immunity to system changes, while the protection settings are configured for optimized performance. The scheme is validated through offline simulations in PSCAD/EMTDC and the technical feasibility of the algorithm in the real world is demonstrated through the use of real-time digital simulation (using RTDS) and Hardware-in-the-Loop (HIL) testing. Both offline and real-time simulations demonstrate that the scheme is able to detect and discriminate between internal and external faults at a significantly high speed, while remaining sensitive to high impedance faults and robust to external disturbances and outside noise.

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