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Impedance Measurement

The document discusses short circuit testing of transformers to measure impedance. A short circuit test involves applying a low voltage (5-10% of rated) to the high voltage side of the transformer while the low voltage side is short circuited. This allows full load current to flow, which is then used to calculate impedance. Specifically, the test measures the voltage required to produce rated current, known as the impedance voltage. Circuit diagrams and equations are provided to calculate the resistive and reactive components of positive sequence impedance from test measurements of impedance voltage and full load copper losses.

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Ahsan Kazi
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
406 views

Impedance Measurement

The document discusses short circuit testing of transformers to measure impedance. A short circuit test involves applying a low voltage (5-10% of rated) to the high voltage side of the transformer while the low voltage side is short circuited. This allows full load current to flow, which is then used to calculate impedance. Specifically, the test measures the voltage required to produce rated current, known as the impedance voltage. Circuit diagrams and equations are provided to calculate the resistive and reactive components of positive sequence impedance from test measurements of impedance voltage and full load copper losses.

Uploaded by

Ahsan Kazi
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Impedance Measurement:

Short circuit test is conducted for finding impedance of a 3 phase transformers.

Short Circuit test:


In short circuit test of a transformer the low-voltage winding is short-circuited. During the short circuit test, we apply 510 per cent of the rated voltage to high-voltage side so that the full-load current flow both in primary and secondary. Voltage is slowly increased from zero to a value to get full-load current to flow. Since 510 per cent of rated voltage at the primary is easier to achieve smoothly and read by a voltmeter, instruments are always placed on the high-voltage side. A voltmeter, an ammeter and a wattmeter are placed on the high-voltage side. The lowvoltage side is directly short-circuited by a thick conductor or by an ammeter.

Positive sequence impedance test circuit for three-phase 2-winding transformer The positive sequence impedance is measured from a standard short circuit test (see figure right). In this test, one set of windings is shorted (typically the LV windings) and a three-phase voltage source is applied to the other set of windings. The voltage is steadily increased until the rated phase current is measured. The voltage at this point is called the impedance voltage. When the impedance voltage is expressed as a per-unit value (on the transformer rated line-to-line voltage), the impedance voltage is equivalent to the per-unit impedance, i.e.

where

is the measured impedance voltage (V) is the rated transformer line-to-line voltage / base voltage (V) is the rated transformer current (A) is the positive sequence impedance () is the transformer base impedance ()

is the positive sequence impedance (pu) The impedance voltage is also often expressed as a percentage (Z%).

Copper Losses Full load copper (or iron) losses are measured in the same test as the impedance voltage by taking the power reading (from the wattmeter in the test circuit). The copper losses represent the I2R losses from the full load current in the phase windings, as well as stray losses due to induced eddy currents from leakage fluxes in the windings, core clamps, tank and other magnetic pathways.

Calculation of R1 and X1 The resistive and reactive components of the positive sequence transformer impedance can be estimated from the two short circuit test measurements - 1) impedance voltage, and 2) full load copper losses. The expressions below calculate the resistance and reactance in per-unit quanitities.

Where

is the positive sequence resistance (pu) is the positive sequence reactance (pu) is the positive sequence impedance (pu)

are the full load copper losses (W) is the transformer rated power (kVA)

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