Abstract

Wire icing events pose a significant threat to the southern power grid’s transmission lines in China. Fifteen such events were identified from 2018 to 2020 on the Guilin-Haiyang Mountain transmission line. Hourly measurements of ice thickness and concurrent meteorological data were analyzed using the Makkonen model’s freezing rate formula to categorize the events into distinct growth patterns: dry and wet. The relationship between wire icing and meteorological factors across different micro-topography (windward slope, leeward slope, and pass) was further explored. Several key conclusions can be drawn. First, the altitude is positively correlated to the icing thickness, but relatively independent of the icing rate; however, such independence between the icing rate and altitude cannot be interpreted by the negative correlation of altitude with temperature and the positive relationship between wind speed and liquid water content. Second, a pronounced connection of the icing rate with meteorological factors is not shown until the wet and dry patterns are separated. Notably, the correlations differ between these two patterns, with icing rate being negatively correlated with temperature for the wet growth process, but positively correlated with wind speed and liquid water content for the dry growth process. Third, both wet and dry growth processes exist across the icing events. A shift from wet to dry growth was evident with increasing altitude. At the mountain’s base, wet growth predominates, with the icing rate determined by the temperature close to the freezing point, whereas the higher temperature and lower liquid water flux account for the shorter wire icing duration, lower icing rate, and thus the thinner icing thickness at the leeward slope compared to the windward slope at a similar altitude. This study sheds light on the variations in icing rates under different micro-topographies and the underlying physical mechanisms governing icing growth patterns and provides a much-needed understanding of these distinct growth processes on the development of a more sophisticated predictive model for conductor icing.

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