GB2579365A - Protection system - Google Patents

Protection system Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2579365A
GB2579365A GB1819433.2A GB201819433A GB2579365A GB 2579365 A GB2579365 A GB 2579365A GB 201819433 A GB201819433 A GB 201819433A GB 2579365 A GB2579365 A GB 2579365A
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GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
substations
substation
protection
power converters
fault
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Granted
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GB1819433.2A
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GB201819433D0 (en
GB2579365B (en
Inventor
Ollerenshaw Richard
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Siemens Mobility Ltd
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Siemens Mobility Ltd
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Priority to GB1819433.2A priority Critical patent/GB2579365B/en
Publication of GB201819433D0 publication Critical patent/GB201819433D0/en
Priority to PCT/EP2019/082276 priority patent/WO2020109172A1/en
Publication of GB2579365A publication Critical patent/GB2579365A/en
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Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B60VEHICLES IN GENERAL
    • B60MPOWER SUPPLY LINES, AND DEVICES ALONG RAILS, FOR ELECTRICALLY- PROPELLED VEHICLES
    • B60M3/00Feeding power to supply lines in contact with collector on vehicles; Arrangements for consuming regenerative power
    • B60M3/04Arrangements for cutting in and out of individual track sections
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H02GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
    • H02HEMERGENCY PROTECTIVE CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS
    • H02H1/00Details of emergency protective circuit arrangements
    • H02H1/0061Details of emergency protective circuit arrangements concerning transmission of signals
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H02GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
    • H02HEMERGENCY PROTECTIVE CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS
    • H02H7/00Emergency protective circuit arrangements specially adapted for specific types of electric machines or apparatus or for sectionalised protection of cable or line systems, and effecting automatic switching in the event of an undesired change from normal working conditions
    • H02H7/26Sectionalised protection of cable or line systems, e.g. for disconnecting a section on which a short-circuit, earth fault, or arc discharge has occured
    • H02H7/261Sectionalised protection of cable or line systems, e.g. for disconnecting a section on which a short-circuit, earth fault, or arc discharge has occured involving signal transmission between at least two stations
    • H02H7/262Sectionalised protection of cable or line systems, e.g. for disconnecting a section on which a short-circuit, earth fault, or arc discharge has occured involving signal transmission between at least two stations involving transmissions of switching or blocking orders
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H02GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
    • H02HEMERGENCY PROTECTIVE CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS
    • H02H3/00Emergency protective circuit arrangements for automatic disconnection directly responsive to an undesired change from normal electric working condition with or without subsequent reconnection ; integrated protection
    • H02H3/02Details
    • H02H3/06Details with automatic reconnection

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Electromagnetism (AREA)
  • Protection Of Static Devices (AREA)
  • Emergency Protection Circuit Devices (AREA)

Abstract

A railway electrification protection system includes: a plurality of substations 30-34 and substation controllers 300-304; a plurality of conductor sections 10-15, 10’-15’; a plurality of power converters 20-23 and power converter controllers 200-203; circuit breakers at the substations; and a network connection 1 between the substations and the power converters. The conductor sections deliver power to trains and are arranged between substations. The power converters receive power from a grid G for supply to the substations and subsequent delivery to the conductor sections. The substation controllers provide fault detection functionality for the conductor sections at the substations. The circuit breakers are operable to disconnect a conductor section at the substation under the control of a substation controller. The network connection allows the substation controllers to distribute protection control signals to the power converters, whereupon the power converter controllers perform protection functions at the power converters. When a fault (e.g. short-circuit) on a conductor section between substations is detected: a protection control signal is generated and delivered to the power converters over the network connection; the power converters are controlled to perform a protection function; then the faulty conductor section is disconnected via the circuit breakers at substations either side of the fault.

Description

PROTECTION SYSTEM
Field
The present disclosure relates to protection systems for railway electrification systems, and to associated methods.
Background
Railway electrification systems use exposed, live conducting elements which allow trains to be powered by collecting current there-from. Where these conducting elements run close to structures, vegetation or uncontrolled public areas, short circuit faults can occur. Short circuits cause intense heating that may lead to equipment damage in the electrification system, as well as potentially causing serious injury. Ultimately, repair or replacement of damaged equipment caused by short circuits causes significant disruption to railway operations, and incidents involving public and railway staff result often lead to major injuries or deaths.
Traditional railway protection systems use distance protection devices installed at each substation to detect short circuits, and associated circuit breakers that open to enable the fault to be cleared. Installing and maintaining the necessary hard-wired interconnections in this type of system is expensive, and still even with a well designed and maintained system a typical UK fault clearance duration is relatively slow, ranging from 100-350ms.
More recently, protection systems based on communication networks have been introduced, in which protection functions are managed using programmable logic controllers provided in intelligent electronic devices at each substation. This has enabled techniques such as accelerated distance protection to be implemented. Communication between intelligent electronic devices in the protection system takes place under the IEC 61850 standard, and the protection system enables all circuit breakers which are required to operate to clear the fault to be opened more quickly. Currently known systems have improved fault clearance duration to typically 60-100ms.
However, there is still a drive to achieve further reduction in fault clearance duration, as well as a drive to ensure good reliability of protection systems without increasing maintenance requirements.
Summary
According to the present disclosure there are provided systems and methods as set forth in the appended claims. Other features of the invention will be apparent from the dependent claims, and the description which follows.
Accordingly there may be provided a protection system for a railway electrification system comprising a plurality of substations, a plurality of conductor sections from which power can be delivered to trains, the conductor sections arranged between substations, and a plurality of power converters arranged to receive power from an electricity grid for supply to the substations and delivery to the conductor sections via the substations; wherein the protection system comprises: substation controllers operable to provide fault detection functionality for the conductor sections at the substations; circuit breakers at the substations, operable to disconnect a conductor section at the substation under the control of a substation controller; the protection system characterised by: a network connection between the substations and the power converters, by which the substation controllers can distribute protection control signals to the power converters; and power converter controllers operable to perform protection functions at the power converters, in response to a protection control signal received from a substation over the network connection between the substation and the power converter.
By providing a network connection between the substations and the power converters, the existence of a faults detected by the substation controllers can be rapidly communicated to the power converter controllers, in order that protection functions for the railway electrification system can be performed at the power converters, for example in cooperation with protection functions performed by substations adjacent to a fault.
In one example, the substation controllers are operable to detect a fault on a conductor section next to the substation, and in response to detecting such a fault: to operate a circuit breaker to disconnect the conductor section at one end thereof; to distribute a protection control signal to the adjacent substation such that the adjacent substation can, in response, operate a circuit breaker at the adjacent substation to disconnect the conductor section at the other end thereof; and to distribute a protection control signal to the power converters. In one example, the protection system comprise a network connection between adjacent substations by which the substation controllers can distribute protection control signals from one to the next, in order to operate a circuit breaker in the adjacent substation in the response to a detected fault.
In this way, inter-trip protection is achieved between substations and protection functions can in tandem be performed by the power converters in response to the protection control signal.
In one example, the power converter controllers are operable to perform protection functions comprising: interrupting supply to the substations; and restoring supply to the substations after previously interrupting supply to the substations.
By suitable programming of the substation controllers and power converter controllers, and choice of power converter components, a rapid response time between fault detection and interruption of power to the substations is possible.
In one example, the circuit breakers at the substations are operable to disconnect and reconnect a conductor section at the substation under the control of the substation controller. In one example, the circuit breakers at the substations are operable to disconnect and reconnect a conductor at the substation under the control of the substation controller in a period while the power converter controllers have interrupted supply to the substations.
In this way, the circuit breakers at the substations may be operated off-load in response to a fault being detected, thereby increasing substation reliability.
In one example, the power converter controllers are integrated with the power converters. In one example, the power converters each comprise a power converter controller. In one example, the substation controllers are integrated with the substations. In one example, the substations each comprise a substation controller. In one example each power converter is arranged to provide power to a group of substations.
Providing controllers in the power converters in this way enables a reduction in costs compared to providing components with rapid response times and more sophisticated control functionality across the many substations on the railway electrification system.
In one example, the network connections between adjacent substations are provided as data network connections, for example as IEC 61850 network connections. In one example, the network connection between the substations and the power converters are provided as data network connections, for example as IEC 61850 network connections. In one example the network connections between adjacent substations and between substations and power converters use the same network protocols as one another.
In one example, the conductor sections are sections of overhead line equipment.
In one example the power converters are AC to AC converters. In one example, the power converters are static frequency converters. In one example, the power converters are three phase to single phase converters.
Accordingly there is provided method of operating a protection system for a railway electrification system comprising a plurality of substations; a plurality of conductor sections from which power can be delivered to trains, the conductor sections arranged between substations; and a plurality of power converters arranged to receive power from an electricity grid for supply to the substations and delivery to the conductor sections via the substations, the method comprising: detecting a fault on a conductor section between substations; generating a protection control signal in response to the detected fault; delivering the protection control signal to the power converters over a network connection and in response controlling the power converters to perform a protection function; and subsequently disconnecting the conductor section on which the fault was detected at substations either side of the fault.
In one example, the method is performed using the protection system and/or in a railway electrification system as herein-described.
In one example, the controlling the power converters to perform a protection function comprises controlling the power converters to interrupt supply to the substations in response to the protection control signal.
In one example, the disconnecting the conductor section comprises comprising the steps of operating a circuit breaker at a substation to disconnect the conductor section at one end thereof; distributing a protection control signal to an adjacent substation such that the adjacent substation operates a circuit breaker at the adjacent substation to disconnect the conductor section at the other end thereof.
In one example, the controlling the power converters to perform a protection function comprises step of controlling the power converters to restore supply to the substations, after the step of disconnecting the conductor section on which the fault was detected at substations either side of the fault.
In one example, the method comprises the further step of reconnecting the conductor section on which the fault was detected, at substations either side of the fault.
Brief Description of the Drawings
Examples of the present disclosure will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which: Figure 1 shows an example embodiment of the protection system incorporated into a railway electrification system; and Figure 2 shows an example embodiment of a method of operating a protection system for a railway electrification system.
Detailed Description
Referring now to Figure 1, there is shown an example embodiment of the protection system, incorporated into a railway electrification system. The railway electrification system is a high voltage AC system in which power from an electricity supply grid G is delivered to trains via overhead line equipment including overhead lines 0 that are formed in conductor sections 10,101-15,15'.
Between the electricity supply grid G and the overhead lines 0 are power converters 20-23. The power converters 20-23 are provided as three phase to single phase static frequency converters with associated power converter controllers 200-203. The output of the power converters 20-23 is delivered to feeder substations 30,34, with further substations along the overhead lines 0 provided between the conductor sections 10,10'-15,15' of the overhead lines 0. As shown schematically, the conductor sections 10,10'-15,15' on each of the overhead lines 0 are provided with suitable isolation components I between one and the next.
The protection system further comprises substation controllers 300-304. The substation controllers 300-304 operate to provide fault detection functionality for the conductor sections 10,101-15,15' at either side of the associated substations 30-34. In the example embodiment of Figure 1, each substation 30-34 comprises its own substation controller 300-304. In this way, so that scaling the system is made easier. The substation controllers 300-304 are provided as intelligent electronic devices, which can control circuit breakers, illustrated as X, at the associated substation 30-34 as part of their functionality. By operation of the circuit breakers X at the substations 30-34, under the control of the substation controllers 300-304 it is possible to disconnect adjacent conductor sections at either side of each of the substations 30-34.
The protection system further comprises a first network connection 1, provided between the substations controllers 300-304 and the power converter controllers 200-203. The first network connection 1 is shown between substation 32 and each of the power converters 20-23, but it is to be understood that the other substations also have a corresponding first network connection 1. The first network connection 1 is a wired connection configured for data transfer according to the IEC 61850 network protocol.
A second network connection 2, also a wired connection configured for data transfer according to the IEC 61850 network protocol, is also provided as part of the protection system. The second network connection 2 is shown only between substations 32 and 33, but is present between each substation and the next in order to enable inter-trip between substations.
Using the first network connection 1 the substation controllers 300-304 distribute protection control signals to the power converters 20-23 over the first network connection 1. In response the power converter controllers 20-23 are arranged to operate to perform protection functions.
The substation controllers each 300-304 operates to detect a fault on a conductor section next to their substation 30-34. For example, a short circuit fault F on the conductor section 13 occurs near to the substation 32. The substation controller 302 recognises the short circuit based on High Speed Overcurrent detection.
In response to detecting the short circuit fault, the substation controller 302 performs a number of functions. To isolate the short circuit by disconnecting the conductor section 13, the substation controller 302 operates a local circuit breaker X in the substation 32 to disconnect one end of the conductor section 13. The end in question is the end which connects to the substation 32. In addition, to isolate the other end of the conductor section the controller 302 sends a protection control signal over the second network connection 2 to the adjacent substation 33. The adjacent substation 33, in response to receipt of the protection control signal by its substation controller 303, operates a circuit breaker X in the substation 33 to disconnect the conductor section at the other end thereof. Further in addition to controlling the local operation of circuit breaker X in the substation 32 and sending the protection control signal over the second network connection 2, the substation controller 302 also distributes a protection control signal to the power converter controllers 200-203 of each of the power converters 20-23, over the first network connection 1.
The power converters 20-23 receive the protection control signal at the power converter controllers 200-203 over the first network connection 1 and are optimised to react very quickly.
The power converters 20-23 comprise large, complex pieces of electrical equipment, typically provided with control systems and current limiting functionality built in, which in response to the protection control signal can be operated to reduce the current supplied to the substations 30-34. That is, all the power converters 20-23 operate together in response to a protection control signal received over the first network connection 1 from any of the substations 30-34, so that supply from the power converters 20-23 is reduced and the substations are effectively disconnected at their input sides.
This enables the local and inter-trip circuit breaker operations to take place on a relatively longer timescale, with the circuit breakers involved opening under no load, or at least reduced load 30 conditions.
The power converter controllers 200-203 are arranged to reconnect supply to the substations 30-34 after a predetermined period of time, the predetermined period being long enough that the circuit breakers in the substations will have opened. The reconnection of supply may be arranged to take place gradually, with a ramping up of current available from the power converters 20-23 over a further predetermined period after the period during which supply is interrupted enabling the conductor sections aside from that with the fault to return to normal operation.
For example the power converter controllers may perform rapid reduction of fault current, which is then maintained for a defined period, effectively disconnecting the fault in milliseconds. The conductor section on which the fault is located can then be disconnected by circuit breakers opening off-load. Following the predetermined period, which may for example be -50ms, the power converter controllers are arranged to restore their normal supply voltage over a short duration, for example 100ms.
Figure 2 shows an example method of operating a protection system for a railway electrification system. The method of Figure 2 is, for example, performed in the railway electrification system of Figure 1.
At a first step, S101 a fault, for example a short circuit fault, is detected on a conductor section between substations. At step S102 a protection control signal is generated. At step S103 the protection control signal is delivered, over a network connection, to power converters of the railway electrification system. At step S104 the power converters perform a protection function in response to the received protection control signal, interrupting supply to the substations. At step S105 the conductor section on which the fault was detected is disconnected at either side of the fault. At step S106 the power converters restore supply to the substations.
In the example embodiment, steps S101 and S102 are performed by a substation controller local to the fault. Step S103 involves communication over the first network connection between the substation controller local to the fault and the power converter controllers. Step S104 is performed by the power converter controllers. Step S105 is performed in part by the substation controller local to the fault, and the adjacent substation controller after communication there between over the second network connection, and by the associated circuit breakers at these substations. Step S106 is performed by the power converter controllers.
As will be appreciated, by communicating fault conditions over the first network connection to the power converters, a rapid response that is effective across the range of possible fault locations can be made, and the associated reduction in operation of circuit breakers on load eases maintenance/increases reliability of the protection system.
Attention is directed to all papers and documents which are filed concurrently with or previous to this specification in connection with this application and which are open to public inspection with this specification, and the contents of all such papers and documents are incorporated herein by reference.
All of the features disclosed in this specification (including any accompanying claims, abstract and drawings), and/or all of the steps of any method or process so disclosed, may be combined in any combination, except combinations where at least some of such features and/or steps are mutually exclusive.
Each feature disclosed in this specification (including any accompanying claims, abstract and drawings) may be replaced by alternative features serving the same, equivalent or similar purpose, unless expressly stated otherwise. Thus, unless expressly stated otherwise, each feature disclosed is one example only of a generic series of equivalent or similar features.
The invention is not restricted to the details of the foregoing embodiment(s). The invention extends to any novel one, or any novel combination, of the features disclosed in this specification (including any accompanying claims, abstract and drawings), or to any novel one, or any novel combination, of the steps of any method or process so disclosed.

Claims (14)

  1. CLAIMS1. A protection system for a railway electrification system comprising a plurality of substations, a plurality of conductor sections from which power can be delivered to trains, the conductor sections arranged between substations, and a plurality of power converters arranged to receive power from an electricity grid for supply to the substations and delivery to the conductor sections via the substations; wherein the protection system comprises: substation controllers operable to provide fault detection functionality for the conductor sections at the substations; circuit breakers at the substations, operable to disconnect a conductor section at the substation under the control of a substation controller; the protection system characterised by: a network connection between the substations and the power converters, by which the substation controllers can distribute protection control signals to the power converters; and power converter controllers operable to perform protection functions at the power converters, in response to a protection control signal received from a substation over the network connection between the substation and the power converter.
  2. 2. The protection system of claim 1, wherein the substation controllers are operable to detect a fault on a conductor section next to the substation, and in response to detecting such a fault: to operate a circuit breaker to disconnect the conductor section at one end thereof; to distribute a protection control signal to the adjacent substation such that the adjacent substation can, in response, operate a circuit breaker at the adjacent substation to disconnect the conductor section at the other end thereof; and to distribute a protection control signal to the power converters.
  3. 3. The protection system of claim 1 or 2, comprising a network connection between adjacent substations by which the substation controllers are operable to distribute protection control signals from one to the next, in order to operate a circuit breaker in the adjacent substation in the response to a detected fault.
  4. 4. The protection system of any preceding claim, wherein, the power converter controllers are operable to perform protection functions comprising: interrupting supply to the substations; and restoring supply to the substations after previously interrupting supply to the substations.
  5. 5. The protection system of any preceding claim, wherien he circuit breakers at the substations are operable to disconnect and reconnect a conductor section at the substation under the control of the substation controller.
  6. 6. The protection system of any preceding claim, wherein the circuit breakers at the substations are operable to disconnect and reconnect a conductor at the substation under the control of the substation controller in a period while the power converter controllers have interrupted supply to the substations.
  7. 7. The protection system of any preceding claim, wherein the power converter controllers are integrated with the power converters such that the power converters each comprises a power converter controller and the substation controllers are integrated with the substations such that the substations each comprises a substation controller.
  8. 8. The protection system of any preceding claim, wherein the network connections are provided as IEC 61850 network connections.
  9. 9. A method of operating a protection system for a railway electrification system comprising a plurality of substations; a plurality of conductor sections from which power can be delivered to trains, the conductor sections arranged between substations; and a plurality of power converters arranged to receive power from an electricity grid for supply to the substations and delivery to the conductor sections via the substations, the method comprising: detecting a fault on a conductor section between substations; generating a protection control signal in response to the detected fault; delivering the protection control signal to the power converters over a network connection and in response controlling the power converters to perform a protection function; and subsequently disconnecting the conductor section on which the fault was detected at substations either side of the fault.
  10. 10. The method of claim 9, performed using the protection system and/or in a railway electrification system as set out in any one of claims 1 to 8.
  11. 11. The method of claim 9 or 10, wherein the controlling the power converters to perform a protection function comprises controlling the power converters to interrupt supply to the substations in response to the protection control signal.
  12. 12. The method of any one of claims 9 or 11, wherein the disconnecting the conductor section comprises comprising the steps of: operating a circuit breaker at a substation to disconnect the conductor section at one end thereof; distributing a protection control signal to an adjacent substation such that the adjacent substation operates a circuit breaker at the adjacent substation to disconnect the conductor section at the other end thereof.
  13. 13. The method of any one of claims 9 to 12, wherein the controlling the power converters to perform a protection function comprises step of controlling the power converters to restore supply to the substations, after the step of disconnecting the conductor section on which the fault was detected at substations either side of the fault.
  14. 14. The method of any one of claims 9 to 13, comprising the further step of reconnecting the conductor section on which the fault was detected, at substations either side of the fault.
GB1819433.2A 2018-11-29 2018-11-29 Protection system Active GB2579365B (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB1819433.2A GB2579365B (en) 2018-11-29 2018-11-29 Protection system
PCT/EP2019/082276 WO2020109172A1 (en) 2018-11-29 2019-11-22 Protection system for a railway electrification system and method of operating

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB1819433.2A GB2579365B (en) 2018-11-29 2018-11-29 Protection system

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GB2579365A true GB2579365A (en) 2020-06-24
GB2579365B GB2579365B (en) 2022-03-02

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* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN114475370B (en) * 2022-03-14 2023-04-07 西南交通大学 Short circuit sectional protection method for contact network of cable through power supply system

Citations (2)

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN203186126U (en) * 2013-04-24 2013-09-11 西南交通大学 Low-frequency traction power supply system
DE102015203843A1 (en) * 2015-03-04 2016-09-08 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Arrangement and method for a DC traction power supply

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE10139318C2 (en) * 2001-08-09 2003-06-18 Siemens Ag Method for error detection in an electrical radiation network, an application of the method and an arrangement for error detection in an electrical radiation network
DE102015202243A1 (en) * 2015-02-09 2016-08-11 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Arrangement for a traction power supply and method for operating the arrangement
CN108777475B (en) * 2018-06-21 2019-07-12 天津凯发电气股份有限公司 A kind of through cophase supply contact net feeder line relay protecting method

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN203186126U (en) * 2013-04-24 2013-09-11 西南交通大学 Low-frequency traction power supply system
DE102015203843A1 (en) * 2015-03-04 2016-09-08 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Arrangement and method for a DC traction power supply

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GB2579365B (en) 2022-03-02
WO2020109172A1 (en) 2020-06-04

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