2.1 GENERAL
The
principle of a.c. generation is fully covered in the manual ‘Fundamentals of
Electricity 2’, where it is developed from Faraday’s Law of Electromagnetic
Induction to the idea of a modern generator with a rotating field and a
stationary armature. This chapter assumes
familiarity with that concept and deals with the actual hardware. Chapter 3
discusses the various methods of excitation.
Figure
2.1 shows, in cutaway form, a typical a.c. generator in the 15-megawatt
(20 000 hp) size range. The
generator proper is enclosed in a box or ‘hood’; this is both to exclude noise
and to contain the closed ventilation system.
It also assists purging before starting if gas has been present. The
rotating parts are coloured yellow and the stator blue.
FIGURE 2.1
TYPICAL A.C. GENERATOR
The
armature (normally the stator) windings carry the load current, which varies
with the loading. These windings have
resistance and generate heat at a rate proportional to the square of the
current (W = I2R).
The field’s exciting winding (normally on the rotor) also carries current.
It too has resistance and generates I2R heat. These two sources of
heat, together with iron loss heating, combine to raise the temperature of the
machine. All the heat must be taken away
by the cooling system if the temperature rise is to be held below the designed
limit.
Since
the stator heating varies with the square of the load current, doubling the
load current gives rise to a four-fold increase in the stator heat
generated. It is important therefore
that the machine never becomes excessively overloaded. If it does, the cooling system may be unable
to handle the heat, and dangerously high temperatures may result.
The
generator is cooled by a shaft-driven fan which circulates air in a closed air
circuit through all the windings. The
air, in circulating, passes through an air/water heat exchanger. Here the heated water is discharged and the
cooled air recirculates, as shown by the arrows in the figure. Temperature detectors at various points give
warning of overheating; if it is seriously high and continues unchecked, the
whole set is usually shut down.
If the
cooling system should break down for any reason, panels in the hood can be
removed and the machine cooled by natural ventilation through the fan. Under these circumstances however the loading
on the generator may have to be curtailed to a value well below its normal
rating.
The
stator (armature) carries a 3-phase winding consisting of insulated conductors
in slots round the inside face. These
conductors must be insulated up to the full working voltage of the system. Serious or sustained excess temperature of
the winding will cause this insulation to deteriorate or even to break down
completely, resulting in an internal flashover and possibly complete write-off
of the generator.
The rotor
windings, which provide the field, operate at a much lower voltage - of the
order of 70V d.c.
- so insulation is less of a problem.
Nevertheless, if the automatic voltage regulator calls for too much
voltage and therefore too much field current, it is still possible to overheat
and damage the rotor.
The
limitations imposed by overheating the stator and rotor are further discussed
in the manual ‘Electrical System Control’, Chapter 1, under the heading
‘Capability Diagram
2.2 ROTOR CONSTRUCTION
A.C. generators
with rotating fields have rotors which fall into two types: salient pole and
cylindrical. They are both shown in Figure 2.2.
The
salient-pole type is illustrated in Figure 2.2(a). It is by far the most common with offshore
generators and also with the smaller sizes onshore. It consists of a solid iron rotor body
(square in the case of a 4-pole rotor) onto which pole pieces are bolted. Each pole piece carries one of the field
windings as shown in the figure. The
poles terminate in pole shoes which spread out the magnetic field in the air
gap, but it should be noted that with the salient-pole arrangement the air gap,
and so the air gap flux, is far from uniform.
Some rotors have damper windings embedded in the pole shoes, but these
are not shown in Figure 2.2(a).
The
salient-pole rotor is commonly used with 4-pole generators. Where there are six or more poles, this is
the only type which is practical.
FIGURE 2.2
A.C. GENERATOR ROTORS
The
cylindrical rotor (sometimes also called ‘turbo type’) is, as the name implies,
completely cylindrical and has no projections.
It is illustrated in Figure 2.2(b).
The field windings are embedded and wedged into slots in the rotor
surface in a similar way to the stator slots.
(The overhang of the end windings has been exaggerated in the figure to
make the construction clearer.) The
rotor slots cover only part of the surface and are disposed either side of the
poles, the whole field winding forming a spiral around each pole centre.
The air
gap is uniform, and consequently the air gap flux due to the field winding is
almost purely sinusoidal around the gap, being maximum opposite each pole
centre. The smooth surface also results
in low windage resistance.
Cylindrical
rotors are very sound mechanically and are favoured for large, high-speed
generators (3 000 or 3 600 rev/mm), where centrifugal forces on a salient-pole
rotor would present severe problems.
Consequently cylindrical rotors are common with 2-pole generators and
are sometimes used with 4-pole types.
They are never used with six poles or more, where the rotor construction
would become far too difficult.
2.3 HARMONICS
Because
the rotor’s magnetic field does not have a pure sine-wave shape, the emf which
it generates in the armature is not a pure sine-wave either; this is
particularly so with a salient-pole rotor.
Although
steps are taken in the stator slot arrangements to offset this effect as much
as possible and to restore the emf to near sine-wave form, this is only partly
achieved, and some impurity remains. It
shows up as harmonic voltages in the emf waveform, and it is the odd-numbered
harmonics which prevail. In a 3-phase
system the third-harmonic voltages (at 150 or 180Hz) are all in phase with each
other and cause equal currents through the loads which all return through the
neutral conductor if there is one. These
third-harmonic currents are sometimes confused with earth-leakage currents
since they may, if sufficiently strong, actuate the earth-fault protection in
the neutral line. They can be
distinguished, however, because their frequency is three times nominal.
In a
3-wire system, where there is no neutral conductor as such, third-harmonic
currents cannot flow through the load and generator windings (unless there is
an earth fault) because there is otherwise no neutral return path. They can, however, circulate between
paralleled generators through their common star-point earths, even without an
earth fault, causing additional heating of the stators. The effect of these harmonics increases with
the generator loading.
At one
time steps used to be taken to restrict the earthing of paralleled generators
to one machine only, in order to prevent such circulation. Modern generators, however, produce less
harmonics than did the older ones, and they are now usually designed to absorb
such circulating currents, so permitting multiple earthing - that is, the
individual earthing of each generator.
Technical
Specification for Synchronous A.C. Generators requires that the voltage
waveform shall be in accordance with the international IEC Publication 34-1(7).
This
requires that the ratio of the net r.m.s. value of all the harmonic voltages
present shall not exceed 5% of the fundamental voltage
for small machines up to 1 000kVA, falling to 1.5% for machines greater than 5 000kVA. When calculating the net r.m.s. value, each
separate harmonic voltage is ‘weighted’ by a factor (λn, for the nth harmonic) depending on its degree
of interference with communications. λn varies from about 0.001
for a 100Hz to 1.4 for a 1 000Hz harmonic.
Thus, if E2, E3,
E4. . . . are the 2nd, 3rd, 4th .... harmonic r.m.s. voltages
and λ 2, λ 3, λ 4 …. the weighting factors, then the net r.m .s.
harmonic voltage is
and this must not exceed the stated percentages of the fundamental r.m.s. voltage.
A
further cause of harmonic currents in a generator can be due to the load itself
and has nothing to do with the voltage waveform. Loads which include rectifiers are a
particularly severe source of harmonic currents. Where an offshore drilling plant is fed
direct from the platform’s main generating system (as distinct from having separate
diesel-driven drilling generators), the SCR units which convert to d.c. for the drilling
motors are a considerable source of a wide range of harmonic currents. Because of the action of rectifiers, this
range consists entirely of the odd-numbered harmonics. And because the 3rd harmonic currents (and
multiples of the 3rd, namely 6th, 9th, 12th ….) are all in phase
with one another, those currents cannot flow in a 3-wire system with no neutral
return.
Therefore
rectifier equipments tend to draw, in addition to the fundamental, the
following harmonic currents:
5th
|
typically
|
12% of
the fundamental
|
7th
|
typically
|
10% of
the fundamental
|
11th
|
typically
|
6% of the fundamental
|
13th
|
typically
|
5% of the
fundamental
|
17th
|
typically
|
4% of the fundamental
|
19th etc
|
typically
|
3% of the fundamental
|
These
harmonic currents are additional to the fundamental current and cause extra
heating in the stator. Their net heating
effect is obtained by adding their squares together and taking the square root
of the sum (i.e. the net r.m.s. value).
This
means that the stator has to carry more current than it would have if its load
had been a normal one without harmonics - that is, it must have a higher kVA
rating for the same kW active output.
Therefore, if the rectified load forms a sizeable part of a generator’s
capacity, the machine must be under-run in terms of active output if its kVA
rating is not to be exceeded, or a special design of generator with a low rated
power factor (e.g. 0.6) must be used.
Harmonic
currents due to the load, in flowing through the reactance of the generator,
cause volt-drops at harmonic frequencies and therefore distortion of the
terminal voltage waveform. Due to their
higher frequencies passing through the same reactance, these harmonics produce
distortion far greater than their magnitudes would suggest. If excessive, this distortion may cause
trouble to other consumers, and for this reason Supply Authorities apply rigid
limits on the amount of rectified load that may be put onto their systems.
2.4 INSULATION
Generator
windings are insulated against the highest voltages to which they may be
subjected, and the insulation must withstand a certain specified maximum
temperature without deteriorating. There
are many insulating materials with different - and often conflicting -
properties. They are grouped into a
number of classes, depending on the maximum temperature to which they will be
exposed and on the insulating material used.
The
classification is as follows (in accordance with BS 2757 :1956).
Class
|
Typical Insulating
Material
|
Ultimate
|
Temperature
|
||
Y
|
Cotton,
silk, paper, etc., unimpregnated
|
90oC
|
A
|
Impregnated
cotton, silk, etc.; paper; enamel
|
105oC
|
E
|
Paper
laminates; epoxies
|
120oC
|
B
|
Glass
fibre, asbestos (unimpregnated); mica
|
130oC
|
F
|
Glass
fibre, asbestos, epoxy impregnated
|
155oC
|
H
|
Glass
fibre, asbestos, silicone impregnated
|
180oC
|
C
|
Mica, ceramics,
glass, with inorganic bonding
|
>180oC
|
It
should be noted that the classification letters do not follow an alphabetical
sequence. This is because there were
originally only three classes - ‘A’ ‘B’ and ‘C’. Later intermediate classes were added, and it
was decided not to disturb the original well-understood three. Most platform and shore-installed generators
are Class ‘B’ or ‘F’.
Certain
of the higher-temperature insulation materials may be hygroscopic and therefore
not always suitable in any particular environment, particularly where dampness
is severe.
It
should be particularly noted that the classification depends on the ultimate
temperature to which the insulating material may be subjected, for it is this
which determines whether or not it will suffer damage when heated. It does not depend on temperature rise alone:
if for instance, the ambient temperature is 40oC, a Class ‘B’
material may be used if the designed temperature rise will not exceed 90oC,
so making the ultimate maximum temperature 130oC. Designed temperature rises therefore must
take into account the greatest expected ambient temperature in which the machine
will operate.
2.5 COOLING
All
generators used on platforms and in shore installations are air cooled. The air is circulated past the stator and
rotor windings by a fan on the generator shaft.
The warmed air itself may be discharged to atmosphere and not used again
(‘Circulating Air’ or CA) or it may be water cooled in a separate cooler with a
forced water circulation (‘Circulating Air, Forced Water’ or ‘CAFW’);or in a
radiator-type cooler (‘Circulating Air, Natural Water or ‘CANW’) There are usually alarms if the air or water
temperatures exceed certain limits. All
the largest gas-turbine generators are CAFW cooled.
The
above letter coding was formerly in general use and is well understood. Recently however a new international coding
system for cooling methods has been
introduced for all rotating machines (BS 4999, Part 21) and is likely to
be met with on modern drawings. It
consists of the letters ‘IC’ followed by two digits. The meanings of these
digits are given below for typical platform or shore-installed generators:
First Digit
|
Second
Digit
|
|||
0
|
Free circulation
|
0
|
Free convection
|
|
1
|
Inlet duct
ventilated
|
1
|
Self-circulation
|
|
2
|
Outlet duct
ventilated
|
2
|
Integral component mounted on separate shaft
|
|
3
|
Inlet and outlet
duct ventilated
|
|||
4
|
Frame surface
cooled
|
3
|
Dependent component mounted on the machine
|
|
5
|
Integral
heat exchanger (using surrounding
medium)
|
|||
5
|
Integral independent component
|
|||
6
|
Machine-mounted
heat exchanger (using surrounding medium)
|
6
|
Independent component mounted on the machine
|
|
7
|
Integral heat
exchanger (not using surrounding medium)
|
7
|
Independent and separate device or coolant system pressure
|
|
8
|
Machine-mounted
heat exchanger (not using surrounding medium)
|
8
|
Relative displacement
|
|
9
|
Separately mounted
heat exchanger
|
|
|
Where it
is desired to specify the nature of a coolant the following letter code is used
in conjunction with the cooling code:
Gases
|
|
air
|
A
|
hydrogen
|
H
|
||
nitrogen
|
N
|
||
carbon
dioxide
|
C
|
||
helium
|
L
|
||
|
|
|
|
Liquids
|
|
water
|
W
|
oil
|
U
|
When
nothing but air is used, the letter ‘A’ may be omitted.
Thus a generator cooled by air with an internal fan and with an
air/water heat exchanger using pressurised water from the platform system would
be classified IC87, or IC8A/7W, instead of the former CAFW.
The
larger generators also have thermocouple-type temperature detectors embedded at
various points in the windings. If any
one of them exceeds a certain temperature, an alarm is given on the control
panel. The panel also has facilities for
the operator to scan all the detectors in turn and to read off the actual
temperatures.
2.6 BEHAVIOUR UNDER FAULT
Figure 2.3 shows the general construction of a rotating field a.c.
generator. For simplicity a 2-pole
machine has been chosen. The rotating
poles are shown with their exciting field windings and damper windings, and the
flux paths are drawn in blue. Outside
the field system is the stator carrying the stationary armature winding in
slots. The condition depicted is the
normal one, with the generator delivering steady load current and with its
normal excitation flux.
FIGURE 2.3
A.C. GENERATOR - MAGNETIC FLUX PATH
The complete magnetic path is from
one field pole (N), through its damper winding, through one air gap,
through the armature (stator) coils, through the yoke, back through a second
air gap, back through the damper windings and the opposite pole, and finally
through the rotor body to the original field pole. The route is indicated in blue in Figure 2.3.
Consider
now that a sudden external short circuit is applied. The pattern of current and the flux
disturbance which then follows is quite complicated. The sequence of the process is shown in
Figure 2.4.
The
first step is that the armature current suddenly rises, limited only by the
reactance due to the stator iron and air-gap magnetic path. The new air-gap flux due to the sudden
increase of armature current (shown in red) tries to penetrate the field poles
but is prevented from doing so by the eddy currents set up in the solid-pole
shoes, aided by damper windings embedded in the face of the shoe if fitted (see
Figure 2.4(a)). The eddy currents
induced oppose the flux change (Lenz’ Law), and the short-circuit flux from the
armature (stator) is deflected along the air gap. Its return path now has a very long air gap,
so the reactance due to the magnetic path is very much lower than before. This is called the ‘subtransient stage’; the
reduced reactance at the beginning of the stage is called the ‘subtransient
reactance’ (symbol X”d), and the increased current which it
allows to pass is called the ‘subtransient current’, as shown in Figure
2.4(d). It persists for a few
cycles. It is during this period that
the system protection normally operates to trip the generator breaker, so the
breaker must be capable of breaking the highest subtransient current.
After
the eddy currents and damper currents have subsided owing to resistance in the
pole shoe and dampers, the armature short-circuit flux will have penetrated the
outside of the main pole body (usually laminated) - see Figure 2.4(b). Here again it meets opposition, because the
changing flux in the pole body induces an emf in the pole winding which
FIGURE 2.4
A.C. GENERATOR ON SHORT CIRCUIT
causes a
current to flow in the closed pole winding/exciter loop to oppose the change
(Lenz’ Law again). The direction of that
opposing current is the same as that of the main exciting current, so the
effect of a short circuit is initially to cause a sudden increase in the
exciter and main field current. Once
again this opposing current is slowly damped out by the resistance of the
exciting loop, and the short-circuit flux from the armature gradually
penetrates the main poles, so increasing the reactance due to the magnetic path
and steadily reducing the short-circuit current. This is called the ‘transient stage’, and it
lasts somewhat longer than the subtransient.
The increased reactance at the beginning of the stage (i.e. at the end
of the subtransient stage) is called the ‘transient reactance’ (symbol X’d),
and the reduced short-circuit current which it allows to pass is called the
‘transient current’. It is lower and
lasts longer than the subtransient, as shown in Figure 2.4(d).
Finally,
when the armature short-circuit flux has fully penetrated all the pole bodies
(see Figure 2.4(c)), all the iron of both stator and rotor is in the magnetic
circuit, and the reactance due to its path is at its greatest; the
short-circuit current then settles down to its steady value. This is the ‘synchronous stage’ and may
continue indefinitely if allowed to do so.
The reactance is called the ‘synchronous reactance’ (symbol Xd),
and the steady-state current the ‘synchronous (short-circuit) current’, as seen
on the right-hand side of Figure 2.4(d).
When
this steady state has been reached, the armature short-circuit flux (red), in
penetrating the main poles, has partly demagnetised them, since it is in
opposition to the main exciting flux (blue).
This phenomenon of demagnetisation of the field by the load current is
called ‘armature reaction’. By weakening
the air-gap flux it reduces the generated emf and so reduces the current still
further. The steady short-circuit
synchronous current may well then be even less than the machine’s normal
full-load current. This, of course,
supposes that the excitation is constant and that no automatic voltage
regulation is applied to compensate for the loss of voltage.
In
practice Automatic Voltage Regulators (AVRs) are always fitted, but in general
they do not act quickly enough to affect the short-lived subtransient
stage. As this period gives rise to the
fiercest short-circuit currents which the switchgear has to break, the effect
of the AVR is not taken into account when calculating fault currents for
switchgear. (See also the manual ‘Electrical Protection’.)
To sum
up: when a short-circuit is suddenly applied to a generator, the ensuing
current goes through three definable stages - subtransient, transient and
synchronous - so long as it is allowed to continue. At the beginning of each stage the current is
determined by one of three reactances, as follows:
Subtransient reactance X”d (Current typically 6 times full load)
Transient reactance X’d (Current typically 3 times full load)
Synchronous reactance Xd (Current typically two-thirds full load)
Transient reactance X’d (Current typically 3 times full load)
Synchronous reactance Xd (Current typically two-thirds full load)
The above currents assume fixed excitation and no AVR action.
The following points on the three types of reactance should be noted:
Subtransient Reactance determines the initial current peaks following a
disturbance and, in the case of a sudden fault, is of importance for selecting
the capacity ratings of the associated circuit-breakers.
Transient Reactance covers the behaviour of a generator in the period 0.1
to 3.0 seconds after a disturbance. This
generally corresponds to the speed of changes in a system and is usually
employed in studies of transient stability.
Synchronous Reactance is a measure of the steady-state stability of the
set. The smaller its value, the more
stable the machine.
One
effect of the heavy short-circuit current on the generator itself is that, if
it persisted for more than a few seconds, winding temperatures would rise to a
point where insulation could be permanently damaged or may even break
down. Automatic protection is therefore
provided (see the manual ‘Electrical Protection’) to clear the fault as quickly
as possible after its onset.
Nevertheless, most large generators are designed to carry their
short-circuit current for three seconds.
A
further, equally important, effect of short-circuit currents is the intense
mechanical stresses which they produce by electromagnetic reaction between the
current-carrying conductors. These occur
from the very first cycle of a fault, and no protection is quick enough to
prevent them. The most severe forces occur
in the overhang at the ends of the windings.
All generators must therefore be constructed to withstand these forces,
and the overhangs are specially braced.
If movement does occur, this is the most likely place to find it.
2.7 DIRECT AXIS AND QUADRATURE AXIS REACTANCES
All that
has been said so far about the generator reactances has assumed that the air
gap is uniform. This in turn assumes a
generator with a cylindrical rotor.
In
practice all offshore, and many onshore, generators are of the salient-pole
type which do not have a uniform air gap.
This adds a complication which leads to the idea of two different types
of reactance: one where the fluxes due to the stator current are opposite the
field pole centres - called the ‘direct axis’ - and the other where the fluxes
due to the stator current are opposite the centre of the gap between two
adjacent poles - called the ‘quadrature axis’. The direct-axis reactances
(subtransient, transient and synchronous) are termed X”d, X’d
and Xd, whereas the corresponding quadrature reactances are X”q,
X’q and Xq.
The two types are combined mathematically in various machine
calculations.
In cylindrical
rotor machines the quadrature-axis reactances are practically the same as the
direct-axis and need not be taken into account separately. This is not so with salient-pole machines; in
their case both types of reactance should be used when making a rigorous
calculation. However, in practice the
error introduced into the calculation of short-circuit currents (see the manual
‘Electrical Protection’) by using only direct-axis values is not significant,
and indeed it errs on the safe side. For
this reason only direct-axis quantities have been used in the previous
description of behaviour under fault.
2.8 EXCITATION AND VOLTAGE CONTROL
The
different forms of excitation and automatic voltage control are dealt with in
Chapter 3.
2.9 NEUTRAL EARTH ING RESISTOR
The
star-points of all high-voltage generators on platforms are earthed through a
current-limiting ‘neutral earthing resistor’ (NER). Its purpose is to limit the fault current
flowing through the generator if an earth fault develops anywhere on the system
(see the manual ‘Electrical Protection’).
The NER
is separately mounted near the generator and usually consists of a frame
containing a heavy grid-type resistance element capable of carrying a large
current for a short time. This
short-time rating is possible because any heavy fault current will be quickly
cleared by the earth-fault protection.
Neutral
earthing resistors are therefore given a maximum current rating for a maximum
time - for example, ‘200A for 30 s’.
They may also have a continuous current rating - for example ‘25A cont.’ - to cover small earth-leakage and
harmonic currents which are not large enough to operate the protection. Their ohmic value goes down to about 10 ohms
for the largest offshore generators.
The NER
unit sometimes contains also a current transformer to measure the presence of
any earth-fault current in order to initiate the protection.
Low-voltage
generators are usually solidly earthed without a neutral earthing resistor.
2.10 INSULATED BEARINGS
Bearings
of a large machine are often insulated to prevent stray currents from
circulating through them. Such currents
can arise from emfs being generated in the rotor shaft due to stray magnetic
fields. Under fault conditions these stray fields can be very large. Figure 2.5(a) shows how such currents may flow through the bearings.
FIGURE 2.5
INSULATION OF
BEARINGS
These
currents, if allowed to flow, would arc across the bearing surface and cause
small craters which would eventually destroy the bearings. Figure 2.5 shows pedestal sleeve bearings,
but the same principles apply to ball and roller bearings.
The
current path of Figure 2.5(a) can be broken by insulating one or both bearings:
the insulation may be at the bearing housing or, more commonly, beneath the
pedestal where it seats on the bedplate stool as shown in Figure 2.5(b). The insulation of only one bearing is more usual,
but insulating both allows the insulation to be checked.
For
reasons of safety the shaft must be at earth potential. Consequently on most machines one bearing
(the uninsulated end if only one is insulated) is fitted with an earth strap,
one end of which terminates in a brush running on the dry shaft. If the generator is of the ‘overhung’ type
with only one outboard bearing, such as with certain diesel-generator sets,
this bearing is insulated and the earthing of the rotor shaft is made through
the engine and coupling.
The
insulation of the pedestal is carried out by a shim of insulating material
between the base of the pedestal and its stool.
The holding-down bolts are bushed with insulating material. Sometimes two insulating shims are used with
a thin metal sheet between them. This
enables the insulation resistance of each part to be measured separately, since
the shaft and bed plate are normally both at earth potential.
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