Abstract

The level of the fault current is enlarged against the capacity of conventional circuit breaks in some urban power grids with the rapid increase of power load. Thus, a high-temperature superconducting fault current limiter (HT SFCL) has been suggested to provide effective and reliable protection of power devices against fault currents. This paper deals with the design of a prototype hybrid SFCL, which is integrated by a double-split reactor with asymmetric noninductively wound copper windings and a noninductive HTS magnet in series to one branch of the reactor. There is a fast switch in series to the magnet as well. The role of non-inductive magnet is for reducing the fault current in the first swing and the double-split reactor further decreases the fault current. The noninductive HTS unit is designed based on the magneto-thermal coupled model. A noninductive superconducting unit prototype is constructed using a YBCO-coated conductor and is immersed in the liquid nitrogen. A high-speed Data Acquisition System of National Instruments based on LABVIEW is built. The critical current and current impact performance for this prototype under the operating temperature of 77 K are investigated experimentally. The experimental results validate the current limiting effectiveness of the noninductive unit for the SFCL with bias magnetic field.

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