Relay Protection Protection of The Main Grid and Customer Connections
Relay Protection Protection of The Main Grid and Customer Connections
Contents
1 Introduction .......................................................................................................................... 2
2 Main principles of the main grid relay protection .............................................................. 2
2.1 400 kV power network..................................................................................................... 2
2.2 110 and 220 kV power grid ............................................................................................. 2
3 Requirements concerning the relay protection of customer connections ...................... 3
3.1 Compatibility ................................................................................................................... 3
3.2 400 kV power network..................................................................................................... 4
3.3 110 kV power network..................................................................................................... 4
3.3.1 General principles .................................................................................................... 4
3.3.2 Operation of protection during an outage ................................................................. 4
The main protection must operate normally even when one transmission line is not in use.
The operation of backup protection may slow down, but not be totally prevented. ................. 4
3.3.3 Voltage relays .......................................................................................................... 4
3.3.4 Under-frequency control........................................................................................... 5
3.3.5 Large urban networks .............................................................................................. 5
4 Connection of a customer’s 110 kV transmission line to a main grid switching station 5
4.1 General principles ........................................................................................................... 5
4.2 Implementation of a differential protection scheme.......................................................... 6
4.2.1 Customer is responsible for implementing ................................................................ 7
4.2.2 Assisted by Fingrid ................................................................................................... 7
4.2.3 Operation and maintenance ..................................................................................... 8
5 Connection of a customer’s 110 kV transformer to a main grid switching station ......... 8
6 A customer’s 110 kV connection to a main grid transmission line .................................. 9
6.1 General requirements ..................................................................................................... 9
6.2 Disconnection of power production at a transmission line connection ........................... 10
6.2.1 General principles .................................................................................................. 10
6.2.2 Disconnection of a production connection or a joint production and consumption
connection ........................................................................................................................... 11
6.2.3 Disconnection relays for production output of 1–5 MW........................................... 12
6.2.4 Communications link for the disconnection of 5–30 MW of production ................... 12
6.3 Implementing a communications link for disconnection ................................................. 13
6.3.1 Fingrid is responsible for implementing .................................................................. 13
6.3.2 Customer is responsible for implementing .............................................................. 13
6.3.3 Operation and maintenance ................................................................................... 14
6.3.4 Technical requirements .......................................................................................... 14
Appendix 1: A diagram of disconnection delays (Fingrid guideline S22410L16) ...................... 16
Appendix 2: EVY diagram (Fingrid guideline S22410L17) ....................................................... 16
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1 Introduction
Fingrid’s application guideline for relay protection presents the operating principles of the
relay protection in Fingrid’s 110, 220 and 400 kV power networks and the requirements
for operation of the protection systems of Fingrid customers (hereinafter referred to as
‘customer’). The application guideline ensures that the relay protection of the connected
power networks is compatible with Fingrid’s systems.
Pursuant to the general connection terms and conditions, a customer connected to the
main grid shall collaborate with the parties connected to the customer’s network to ensure
that the networks and associated electrical equipment of these parties meet Fingrid’s
general connection terms and conditions and other guidelines and requirements
governing the implementation of a connection.
The protection detects short circuits and normal earth faults (fault resistance < 20 Ω)
within 0.5 seconds.
A. When the meshed grid is short (0...5 Ω), the non-delayed trip of the primary protection
must cover the entire line, which necessitates a communications link for the protection
or a line differential protection. A line reactance (x) of 5 Ω corresponds to 13–18 km of
overhead lines, depending on conductor type.
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B. If the ring lines are long (more than 5 Ω), the tripping of a fault near the end of the line
may occur in the delayed zone of the primary protection. The primary protection of the
substation near the fault operates with no delay. Only a more distant station may
continue to feed fault current. The total duration of current may not exceed 0.5
seconds in such faults.
In the event of a power line short-circuit fault, the backup protection mainly operates with
a delay of 0.1–1.0 seconds, depending on the level of fault current and the location of the
fault. Backup protection usually operates most rapidly when a fault occurs near the
beginning of power lines that originate from large transformer substations. The protection
must operate rapidly close to substations, since the reach of voltage dips voltage dips is
large in such locations. For faults near the end of long power lines, the time could be a
few seconds if the backup protection handles the trip.
Earth faults with a high fault resistance (approx. 20–500 Ω) are usually disconnected in
1–3 seconds, but always within 5 seconds from the start of the fault. Primary protection
and/or backup protection contain a sensitive earth fault trip function.
If more than 1 MW of power generation is connected to a 110 kV power line of the main
grid, a synchro-check will be implemented at both stations of the power line to prevent an
asynchronous connection.
Electrical equipment connected to the main grid and electrical equipment directly or
indirectly connected to the first electrical equipment must operate and remain operational
within the voltage and frequency ranges required by Fingrid’s General Connection Terms
(YLE). The customer is responsible for ensuring that loss of voltage or momentary
voltage or frequency excursions that exceed the permitted values do not damage the
customer’s or other parties’ electrical equipment. The customer can implement this, for
example, by installing over- and undervoltage protection in their electrical equipment and,
if necessary, also frequency protection.
Each party is responsible for implementing protection schemes on the switchgear stations
they manage as well as the functionality of these protection schemes. An exception to
this are differential relays, which are the responsibility of the power line owner that
connects to the station. The connecting party is responsible for the suitability of the
protection and for configuring its settings. If necessary, Fingrid will assist the connecting
party in configuring the settings.
If Fingrid renovates the existing substation, Fingrid will calculate the settings for new
relays of customer’s power lines and will send them to customer for approval.
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At a customer’s substation that does not require the busbar protection as described in
section 4.1 (i.e. the customer’s substation is further than 5 Ω from a Fingrid station), the
fault time may not exceed 0.5 seconds in the event of a busbar fault, including breaker
and current transformer faults. The fault time in a 110 kV network that the customer uses
as a meshed network must not exceed 0.1 seconds.
The main protection must operate normally even when one transmission line is
not in use. The operation of backup protection may slow down, but not be totally
prevented.
If necessary, a backup grounding location for the 110 kV star shall be used to increase
the earth fault current.
Over- and undervoltage protection is not required in the 110 kV network. However, DSOs
must have an over- and undervoltage protection scheme on the low-voltage side to
prevent damage to consumer devices.
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a. Switching on to a fault, in which case the differential relay or the SOTF (Switch on
to Fault) function of the distance relay must cause an immediate trip.
The operating time of protection must be harmonised with the protection scheme of the
main grid.
Trip Z1 = 0.85 x X1
Trip Z2 = 1.2 x X1
The delay of a sensitive earth fault protection (60 A) in a radial line should generally be
1.0 seconds or less.
b. When selective and sensitive earth fault protection is required for consecutive
switches along a radial transmission line, the settings could be configured as 1.0
secs, 0.7 secs and 0.4 secs, for example. If a delay of more than 1.0 sec is
required, the setting must be harmonised with the staggering scheme of the main
grid.
The distance relay of a radial transmission line must not trip in the event of a ground fault
if the fault is elsewhere in the network. When the fault is elsewhere in the network, the
distance relays and directional earth fault relays will see the capacitive current supplied
by a radial transmission line as an earth fault on the radial transmission line. The
magnitude of the capacitive current is affected by the total length of the power lines at the
connection point. Furthermore, the capacitive current supplied by cables is much higher
than that supplied by overhead wires. If the capacitive charging current exceeds 50 A
(3I0), it must be taken into account in the settings. The minimum operating current setting
for distance relays is usually 120 A.
If a power plant connects to a main grid switching station directly or via the network of a
Fingrid customer, Fingrid does not require a disconnection.
The customer can implement the line differential protection independently or with the
assistance of Fingrid as follows:
c. The relay type can be selected in accordance with the customer’s needs.
d. The customer is responsible for factory acceptance testing (FAT) of the relays.
e. The customer supplies the fully configured relay to a Fingrid contractor who
installs it in Fingrid’s substation.
b. Commissioning tests are carried out in co-operation with the customer, since a
tester is required at both ends of the line.
d. The relay type must be listed in Fingrid’s list of approved relay types.
e. Fingrid performs its normal factory acceptance tests (FAT) on the relay cabinets.
During the FAT, the differential relays can be connected to each other with
fibres, which ensures verification of the configuration and settings before the
differential relays leave the factory.
f. Fingrid will supply the fully configured relay to the customer’s contractor, who will
install it in the customer’s substation.
The customer is responsible for the maintenance and monitoring of the relays and
communications links at both ends of their transmission line. Periodic testing and other
testing must be agreed upon and carried out in co-operation with Fingrid. Testers
operating at a Fingrid substation must be approved by Fingrid. If requested, the customer
is obligated to deliver the relay testing protocols to Fingrid.
Fingrid is not responsible for monitoring the customer’s relays and communications links.
Fingrid is not obligated to connect the monitoring/alarms of the customer’s relay or
communications links to their own operation control system.
In such cases, customers must equip their transformers with a differential protection
scheme. The differential protection scheme must protect the customer’s transformer and
the stretch of transmission line or cable between the transformer and the 110 kV field of
the main grid. The differential protection relay is located at the customer’s substation.
Secondary currents are cabled for the relays from Fingrid’s substation. Other signals
between the stations (trips, alarms, interlocks and status information) are transferred
using signal transmission devices and a fibre optic connection between the devices. The
customer is responsible for the implementation and cost of the required secondary
circuits between the customer’s substation and Fingrid’s substation. Secondary circuits
and the differential relay will remain the customer’s property.
Fingrid’s substation has an overcurrent/earth fault relay that acts as backup protection for
the customer’s transformer and the 110 kV transmission line or cable that runs between
Fingrid and the customer. The protective relay is owned by Fingrid.
The voltage regulator of the customer’s main transformer is located in the customer’s
substation. The voltage regulator is the customer’s property.
A transformer through which production is connected to the grid must be equipped with a
110 kV earth fault protection (Electrical Safety Act 1135/2016 and standard SFS 6001,
section 4.2.2). Earth fault voltage is measured either at the 110 kV bus voltage
transformers or the 110 kV star point of the transformer. An earth fault voltage relay
disconnects production in the event of an earth fault in the 110 kV transmission line.
Production can be disconnected by tripping the 110 kV or low-voltage circuit breaker or
the medium-voltage lines which are energised by production. A tripping earth fault
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protection must always be constructed if the output power of an individual power plant
(for example, a wind farm) in the connection exceeds 1 MW. If the production power
behind the transformer is less than 50% of the minimum consumed power and no
individual power plant outputs more than 1 MW, an earth fault voltage relay is not
required. If an earth fault relay is omitted by virtue of the 50% rule, the connecting party is
responsible for monitoring the ratio of consumption to production.
The operating time of backup protection must be harmonised with the protection scheme
of the main grid. Instead of backup protection, Fingrid recommends the use of two relays
that trip with no delay.
The delay of a sensitive earth fault protection (60 A) must be 1.0 seconds or less.
A transformer through which production is connected to the grid must be equipped with
110 kV earth fault protection. Earth fault voltage is measured either at the 110 kV bus
voltage transformers or the 110 kV star point of the transformer. An earth fault voltage
relay disconnects production in the event of an earth fault in the 110 kV transmission line.
Production can be disconnected by tripping the 110 kV or low-voltage circuit breaker or
the medium-voltage lines which are energised by production. A tripping earth fault
protection must always be constructed if the output power of an individual power plant
(for example, a wind farm) in the connection exceeds 1 MW. If the production power
behind the transformer is less than 50% of the minimum consumed power and no
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individual power plant outputs more than 1 MW, an earth fault voltage relay is not
required. If an earth fault relay is omitted by virtue of the 50% rule, the connecting party is
responsible for monitoring the ratio of consumption to production.
To succeed, a rapid reconnection of a main grid power line requires that the production
connected to it – either directly or via some other party’s network – does not maintain
voltage at the power line when a fault in the electric network has caused the circuit
breakers that supply the power line to open at the substations of the main grid.
If production connects to Fingrid’s network over a backup connection that does not
contain disconnection functionality, the terms and conditions of the connection must be
agreed with Fingrid on a case-by-case basis.
A power plant’s own protection should be configured to ensure that the plant does not
disconnect from the network, except when a fault occurs in the plant’s own connection
line. The settings of the undervoltage and frequency relays of power plant generators
must not conflict with the technical requirements of power plant systems (VJV). The
following settings are recommended:
Undervoltage relays:
voltage (p.u.) time (sec)
Frequency relays:
frequency time (sec)
(Hz)
Relays whose operation is based on the rate of frequency change are not permitted in
disconnection schemes for production in the 110 kV network, medium-voltage network
and low-voltage side.
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a. Local disconnection relays are required for 1–5 MW production that connects to
a main grid transmission line (implemented as specified in section 6.2.3).
The choice between local disconnection relays (6.2.3) and a disconnection (6.2.4)
communication link is made by applying the same principles as for a production
connection. The options for implementing disconnection are as follows:
c. Only a part of production is disconnected following the 50% rule above, which
results in a situation in which production cannot maintain voltage in the network.
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a. An under and over frequency relay that measures high, medium or generator
voltage.
For a diagram of the implementation and settings, see Appendix 1 (Fingrid instruction
S22410L16).
a. A 3U< relay that operates even if one of the line-to-line voltages falls below the
set value.
c. A sample-and-hold circuit that permits the remote EVY trip to pass through even
if the operating conditions of the voltage relays are quickly restored.
For a diagram of the implementation and settings of an EVY, see Appendix 2 (Fingrid
instruction S22410L17).
To ensure that a protection scheme of a main grid transmission line is actually operating,
the symmetric fault current supplied by a 5–30 MW production output at a transmission
line connection may not exceed 1.2 times the nominal current of the plant after 300 ms
from the beginning of the fault. The nominal current is calculated from the rated power of
the power plant. If the fault current cannot be limited to the required level within 300 ms
from the beginning of the fault, the customer must install a protection scheme that
ensures the disconnection of the fault current supply. In such cases, Fingrid will instruct
the customer about the protection requirements on a case-by-case basis.
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In addition, an earth fault voltage relay must be present in all transformers through which
production can be supplied to the transmission line of the main grid.
For production, the reception of an EVY remote trip is constructed in a single location in
which measurement data on the 110 kV voltage is available and can be forwarded. The
customer must provide adequate space for telecommunications equipment and arrange
the necessary auxiliary power supplies.
If necessary, the customer must extend the remote EVY trip to the circuit breakers of
other potential terminal sites. The interface for Fingrid’s delivery is the installation of the
customer’s EVY device into a cabinet chosen by the customer. The customer must
construct the wiring for the EVY trip from the EVY device to the circuit breaker(s).
When connecting to a network that is owned by another party and connects to a Fingrid
transmission line, the network owner is responsible for implementing the EVY in co-
operation with the production owner.
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The EVY device is placed into a separate cabinet at Fingrid’s substation. The cabinet is
labelled with the owner’s name and contact details. Fingrid will supply the cabinets with
tripping information of distance relays and the necessary auxiliary electric power. This
cabinet will also be home to the relays of the backup connection, unless they are already
present in the field’s relay cabinet.
An EVY communications link supplied by the DSO or production owner remains the
property of the DSO/power plant owner at both substations. The DSO/power plant owner
is also responsible for the maintenance of such a connection. In such cases, the
DSO/power plant owner must assume responsibility for monitoring EVY and its alarms at
their own substation.
An EVY communications link supplied by Fingrid remains the property of Fingrid up to the
signal transfer device at the customer’s substation. Fingrid is also responsible for the
maintenance of such a connection. In such cases, Fingrid assumes responsibility for
monitoring EVY and its alerts at their own substation.
Any testing must be agreed upon and performed in cooperation with Fingrid.
b. An EVY remote trip must trip a fault current within 500 ms, which means that the
maximum delay of telecommunications devices may not exceed 400 ms.
Consequently, the delay in a loop measurement may not exceed 800 ms.
c. The reliability of the signal pass-through in an EVY trip must be at least 95%.
b. EVY monitoring requires that EVY devices have an alarm contact that issues an
alarm when the communications link is inoperative. This connection is monitored
by the communications link owner.
c. The length of the incoming EVY signal must be configurable at the EVY terminal
device.
d. The power supply for an EVY device must be redundant and come from a
battery bank or an inverter.
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e. An EVY device shall be equipped with a protective power switch that is also
used to exchange remote trip data between protective relays and the EVY
device. The protective switch is placed in the same cabinet as the EVY device. If
more than one communications link for disconnection is implemented at a
substation, all terminal devices must have their own protective switch.
a. When a main grid transmission line is protected by a distance relay and zone
Z1, Z2 or SVY (communications link zone of protection) of this relay causes a
trip at the terminal station of the transmission line, an EVY signal will be sent to
production.
b. If the transmission line is using a backup connection, the EVY signal will be sent
when a distance relay trips on the busbar circuit breaker field.
c. If the transmission line or one of its its legs has no shield wires, the EVY signal
will also be sent when a ground fault relay trips.
e. To monitor the delivery of the EVY signal and transit time, a feedback loop is
created from the receiving terminal device to the sending substation. If
necessary, this signal can be connected to a disturbance recorder and/or remote
operation.
h. Before production is connected to the network, EVY devices and the connection
link must be tested, including transit time measurement.