Abstract
The voltage and current measurement of the medium-voltage (MV) side are used for the traditional fault location method, which leads to a high installation cost of the measurement and complicated post-operational and maintenance work. A fault location method is proposed based on the distributed measurement at the low-voltage (LV) side. On the analysis of voltage distribution rules and the influence of the distribution transformer on voltage transmission, obvious differences are found in the variation of voltage (phase voltage and sequence voltage) at the LV side for different faults—specifically, the detection sensitivity of the voltage to different faults varies. Therefore, a fault location method for the MV distribution network based on characteristic voltage at the LV side is proposed. Firstly, the characteristic voltage is selected adaptively according to the fault type. The suspected fault path is then determined by the characteristic voltage amplitude of measuring points. Finally, the fault segment is located via the characteristic current of each segment. This method can be applied in combination with the widely used LV measurement equipment such as the power consumption information acquisition system and the intelligent fusion terminal to acquire LV side voltage without adding new measurement devices. The distribution difference of the characteristic voltage at the LV side is applied for accurate fault finding, which is an economical and practical new idea for the fault location of the distribution network. The correctness and effectiveness of the method were verified by the simulation of the IEEE 34 system built in PSCAD/EMTDC and a real distribution network.
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