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CT Theory

The document summarizes a presentation on practical considerations of current transformer (CT) performance given at Texas A&M University. The presentation covered CT fundamentals, secondary voltage and CT equivalent circuits, excitation curves and CT errors, and CT parameters per various standards. It included examples of calculating CT secondary voltage for a phase-to-ground fault using given CT specifications and connected equipment impedances.

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Shahid Ullah
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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
879 views

CT Theory

The document summarizes a presentation on practical considerations of current transformer (CT) performance given at Texas A&M University. The presentation covered CT fundamentals, secondary voltage and CT equivalent circuits, excitation curves and CT errors, and CT parameters per various standards. It included examples of calculating CT secondary voltage for a phase-to-ground fault using given CT specifications and connected equipment impedances.

Uploaded by

Shahid Ullah
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 PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 37

Texas A&M University

60th Annual Conference


for Protective Relay Engineers

Practical Considerations of
CT Performance
Mehdi Yahyavi, Farshid Vahedian Brojeni, Mohammad Vaziri

Pacific Gas and Electric Company

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 1


Agenda

1) CT FOUNDAMENTALS (Steady State Analysis)

2) SECONDARY VOLTAGE AND CT EQUIVALENT CIRCUIT


Example 1

3) EXITATION CURVE AND CT ERRORS


Example 2

4) CT PARAMETERS PER VARIOUS STANDARDS


Example 3

5) CONCLUDING REMARKS

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 2


1. CT FOUNDAMENTALS
FOR STEADY STATE ANALYSIS

• Basic Equations:
IS=IP / NR
VS= 4.44 f. NR.B.S. 10-8 IP NR =IP/IS

1 : NR-turns IS
Where:
• Ip=Primary current
• IS= Secondary current M
• VS=Secondary voltage B S Vs

• f=Frequency R
• NR=Rated turn ratio
• B=Flux density
• S= Core area cross section
Current Transformer

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 3


2. SECONDARY VOLTAGE &
CT EQUIVALENT CIRCUIT
• Circuit Equations IP IS IM
ZCT ZL
IM = IS – IE IE
VS= IM x ZT
VS ZR
ZE

Where:
IS= IP / NR Secondary current
IM= IP / NA Measuring current ZB
ZT = ZCT + ZB Total burden: 1:NR
(Ideal) ZT
CONNECTED
BURDEN
TOTAL
ZB = ZL + ZR Connected burden CT Equivalent Circuit BURDEN

IE = Excitation path Impedance


ZE = Excitation path Impedance
ZCT = CT winding burden
ZL = Lead wire burden
ZR = Relay & meters burden
NR = Rated turn ratio
NA = Effective ratio

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 4


Main Concerns

• Where is the
calculated VS
on the CT
characteristic
for a specific
fault?

• Is the CT error
acceptable
for this case?

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 5


Calculate CT Secondary Voltage VS
Seven Steps:

IP IS IM
1) Secondary Fault Current IS ZCT ZL
– Assuming: IM ~IS , IE
then: IM = IS= IP / NR
VS ZR
ZE
2) CT Winding Impedance ZCT
– Calculate per manufacturer
Ohm/turn values
1:NR ZB
(Ideal)
CONNECTED
3) Wires Impedance ZL ZT BURDEN
TOTAL
CT Equivalent Circuit BURDEN

– Calculate by having the wire


lengths and size
Utilizing empirical formula:

ZL= e(0.232 G -2.32) Milliohm/ft

Where:
G is the American Wire Gauge
3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 6
Calculate CT Secondary Voltage VS (Cont.)

4) Total meter & relay impedance ZR


– Microprocessor relays: 0.5 Ohm including meters
– Electromechanical relays: calculate ZR for connected tap as:
ZR= Z0 (T0 / TR)2
In this formula, T0 is minimum tap, Z0 is relay burden at
minimum tap and TR is the selected tap

5) CT Connected Burden ZB
– Calculate for 3-phase system based on the table (IEEE/ANSIC.37.110)
CT connection 3Ph or 2Ph Fault Ph-to-Ground Fault
Wye at CT- terminal ZB = ZL + ZRP ZB = 2ZL + (ZRP + ZRG)
Wye at Switchboard ZB = 2ZL + ZRP (2-Ph) ZB = 2ZL + (ZRP + ZRG)

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 7


Calculate CT Secondary Voltage VS (cont.)

IP
6) CT Total Burden IS IM
ZCT ZL
IE
ZT =ZCT + ZB
VS ZR
ZE

1:NR ZB
(Ideal) ZT
CONNECTED

7) Secondary Voltage CT Equivalent Circuit


TOTAL
BURDEN
BURDEN

VS= IM ZT

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 8


Example 1:
Calculate CT Secondary Voltage for phase to ground
fault given the following:

– CT Maximum tap=6000:5 ZL+ ZRP ZM

– CT connected tap=1000:5 ZL ZRP ZM

– CT Wires =140 Feet of 12 ZL ZRP ZM


AWG (0.0016 Ohm/Feet)
– Winding resistance=0.00171
Ohm/turn
– Relay and meter burden
ZR=1.09 Ohm ZL ZRG

– CT connection= Wye- at CT
terminals CT connection in a 3Ph system with
– Primary fault current=16KA single phase fault

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 9


CT Characteristics by Manufacturer
• Manufacturer’s Data

• Excitation Curve
Secondary Voltage per
Excitation Current

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 10


Step by Step Solution
1) CT secondary current: IP IS IM

NR=1000/5 =200 IE
ZCT ZL

(secondary winding turns) VS ZR


ZE
IS ~=IM =IP/N=16,000/200= 80A

1:NR ZB
(Ideal) ZT CONNECTED

TOTAL BURDEN

2) Winding impedance of the CT: BURDEN

ZCT =200×0.00171=0.342 Ohm

3) CT Wire (leads) burden:


ZL = 140 feet×0.0016= 0.224
Ohm
3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 11
Step by Step Solution (Continued)
4) Burdens for Phase relays ZRP , ZL+ ZRP ZM

Ground relays ZRG and any Meter ZM ZL ZRP ZM

ZR = ZRP + ZRG+ ZM ZL ZRP ZM

ZR =1.090 Ohm

5) Connected Burden
ZB =2ZL + ZR =2×0.224+1.09=1.538 ZL ZRG

Ohm

6) Total Burden: IP IS IM
ZT =ZCT + ZB =0.342+1.538 =1.880 ZCT ZL
IE
Ohm
ZE
VS ZR

7) CT secondary voltage for ground


fault:
1:NR ZB
VS= IM ZT ZT CONNECTE
D BURDEN
= 80×1.88=150.4V~150V TOTAL
BURDEN

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 12


3. EXITATION CURVE AND CT ERRORS
VS Excitation Voltage (Secondary)

CT Characteristic 1000
VA
A
Vk Point of
K
• Operating Region (linear) 100
10% Error
VS S
Knee Point
• Knee point
45O Operating
10
Point
• Saturation Region
beyond the knee point 1

where errors increase

0
IA
0.01 0.1 1 10 100
Exciting Amperes IE

CT Typical Excitation Curve

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 13


CT Characteristic by Open Circuit Test

CT characteristic can be generated by testing

• CT primary is in open circuit configuration


• Variable voltage source applied at the secondary
• Plot IE verses the secondary voltage VS
IE
Z CT A
VS

Open Variable
ZE V
Primary AC-Voltage

Test Circuit of the CT


3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 14
CT Characteristics by Manufacturer
• Manufacturer’s Data

• Excitation Curve
Secondary Voltage per
Excitation Current

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 15


CT Ratio Error ER
• Difference between Measured secondary current IM and the
primary current caused by IE
• Defined as Ratio of the excitation current IE to the measured
secondary current IM :
ER = (IE / IM ) or as percentage: ER % = (IE / IM )x100

• Can also be expressed as differences between effective ratio NA


and rated ratio NR :
ER=( NA -NR) / NR then: NA = (ER x NR ) +NR
IP IS IM
ZCT ZL
IE

ZE
VS ZR

Errors may be significant


beyond the knee point 1:NR ZB
ZT CONNECTED

TOTAL BURDEN
BURDEN

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 16


Ratio Error in different taps “a”, “b”

• Ratio error varies as the CT tap changes

• It is inversely proportional to the square of tap ratios

ER-a / ER-b = (Nb / Na )2 or: ER-b = ER-a × (Na / Nb )2

In these formulas, ER-a and ER-b are ratio errors, Nb and Na are
turn ratios, both at taps “a” and “b” respectively

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 17


Example 2:

For the CT in the same circuit as example 1:

a) Calculate CT ratio error ER


b) Calculate effective CT ratio NA
c) Determine knee point voltage VK from the curve
d) Determine the Saturation Voltage VA at the 10%
error limit
e) Determine CT ratio error at the full tap (6000:5)

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 18


Example 2 (Continued):
a) Calculate CT ratio error ER
From the manufacturer’s CT curve for tap (1000:5), IE = 1A corresponding to
VS=150V and IM=80A calculated in example 1

ER1% = IE / IM ×100 =(1/80) x100= 1.25%

1000 V

Vk=500

160 160 V
Vs=150

Vk=82

8A
3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 19
Example 2 (Continued):

b) Calculate effective CT ratio NA

NA =(ER× NR)+ NR

=(0.0125×200)+200= 202.5

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 20


Example 2 (Continue):
c) Determine knee point voltage VK from the curve

VK=82V < 150V

1000 V

Vk=500

160 160 V
Vs=150

Vk=82

8A

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 21


Example 2 (Continue):
d) Determine Saturation voltage VS at 10% error
IE = 80A ×10%= 8A
VA =160V (Max Allowable Voltage) >150V

1000 V

Vk=500

160 160 V
Vs=150

Vk=82

8A
3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 22
Example 2 (Continue):
e) Determine CT ratio error at the full tap (6000:5)
N1 / N2 = 200/1200= 0.167
ER-2 = ER-1×(N1 / N2)2 =1.25%×(0.167)2 =0.0348~0.035% <1.25%
ratio error reduces significantly at higher taps

1000 V

Vk=500

160 160 V
Vs=150

Vk=82

8A
3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 23
4. CT PARAMETERS
PER VARIOUS STANDARDS

Three basic CT parameters are defined by


different standards for steady-state analysis:

• Accuracy Classes
• Knee point
• Burden

Let’s compare between ANSI/IEEE and IEC/BS


standards
3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 24
CT PARAMETERS PER ANSI/IEEE

Accuracy Classes

A secondary terminal voltage rating which


CT produces (100, 200, 400 or 800 Volts)
without exceeding 10% Ratio Error at 20
times nominal current when it is connected
to an standard burden (1, 2, 4 or 8 Ohm at
0.5-Power factor).

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 25


CT PARAMETERS PER 45O K

ANSI/IEEE Knee point


IEEE

Knee Point

– One method to determine knee point on the curve


refers to the point where the tangent to the curve is at
45o to the abscissa
– Another definition specifies the knee point as the
cross section of continuation of the two linear sections
of the CT curve

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 26


CT PARAMETERS PER
ANSI/IEEE

Knee Point (Continued)

– manufacturer always defines the nominal knee point


of the CT based on the highest tap
– For the lower taps the knee point voltage should be
proportionally lower than nominal knee point
– knee point voltage varies almost linearly as a
function of tap ratio

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 27


CT PARAMETERS PER
ANSI/IEEE
• Burden

Standard burden in “Ohms” refers to the value


for which the voltage generated by 20-times
the rated current is below a level where the
Ratio Error is 10%

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 28


CT Parameter per IEC/BS

Accuracy Classes:

Class-P accuracy expressed as “xPy” means that the CT


may have “x” percent error for a secondary current equal
to “y” times the rated secondary current. ( P stands for
Protection)

(i.e. 5P20 means 5% error at 20 times secondary current )

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 29


CT Parameter per 1-5
K

IEC/BS Knee Point


(IEC)

• Knee Point
– The point on the magnetizing curve where a
10% increase in the voltage corresponds to a
50% increase in the magnetizing current

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 30


CT Parameter per IEC/BS
• Burden
– Connected burden: sum of all the impedances ZB connected to
the terminals of CT

– Nominal burden: maximum connected burden without exceeding


the error limit that creates an overload (or temperature rise)
above the specified limit

– The specified accuracy class is based on Nominal Burden of the


CT. Nominal burden is usually defined by the manufacturer and
can be verified by temperature rise test.

– According to IEC standard, nominal burden is a CT design


specification and maybe expressed in VA

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 31


Example 3:
For the same CT of examples 1 & 2,
assuming ANSI/IEEE class = C800

a) Determine the equivalent accuracy class, knee-


point voltage, and the nominal burden of the CT at
1000/5 tap

b) Determine the equivalent class of this CT per


IEC/BS standards:

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 32


Example 3 (Continued):

a) Determine the equivalent accuracy class, knee-point


voltage, and the nominal burden of the CT at 1000/5
tap
• Accuracy class: 800 × (1000/6000)= 133.3
>100 => equivalent to C100 for this tap
• Knee point: 500 (for max tap) × (1000/6000)
=82 V (see next slide)
• Nominal Burden at 100 V secondary is equal to:
1.0 Ohm, that is the standard “B-1” burden.

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 33


1000 V

Vk=500

160 V
160
Vs=150

Vk=82

8A

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 34


Example 3 (continued):

b) Determine the equivalent class of this CT


per IEC/BS standards:

• x =10 percent error for 100A current


• y=100A/5=20
• Equivalent IEC class= 10P20

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 35


CONCLUDING REMARKS
In this paper:

• Basic theory governing the operation of a CT


and a simplified circuit model for Steady State
analysis was reviewed.
• It was discussed that the simplified model can
be used to determine adequacy of CT
performance for most practical cases.
• It was shown that the generated voltage on the
CT secondary can be approximated using a 7
step procedure. A practical case (example 1)
was considered for illustrations.
• The "Ratio Error" in a CT was defined and a
sample calculation was presented in example 2.
3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 36
CONCLUDING REMARKS (Continued):

• Despite some differences, between ANSI/IEEE and


IEC/BS standards, the main parameters of concern
affecting CT performance are;
Accuracy class,
Knee Point, and
Total Burden.
• It was shown (example 3) that a CT with
approximately equivalent accuracy designation in the
IEC/BS standard maybe identified from the accuracy
class its counter part in the ANSI/IEEE standard.

For additional information contact Mehdi Yahyavi at: [email protected]

3/27/2007 Practical Consideration of CT Performance - Texas A&M University 37

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