Abstract

Visions of energy transition focus on activating end users, meaning that numerous flexible-distribution network-level devices become active participants in power-system operations. This implies a fast, reliable, and secure exchange of data, enabling the distribution-system operators to maintain, or even improve, the quality and delivery of service. With the introduction of the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) 61850 standard, the path is set for a single communication topology covering all substation levels. The standard has the potential to change the way substations are designed, built, tested, and maintained. This means that the key segment of the substation, its protection system, will go through a transition period with the end goal of having a digitized substation where all information exchange is performed over an Ethernet communication bus. This paper analyzes the performance impact of the IEC 61850-9-2LE on the protection system. To do this, a laboratory hardware-in-the-loop test setup was developed representing traditional-, hybrid-, and digital-substation topology. The setup serves to simulate faults and create transient waveforms in an extended IEEE 123-node test system, which is then used to detect the reaction times of protection relay devices. To verify the results, a significant number of tests was performed clearly showing the benefits of digitalizing the distribution system.

Highlights

  • The extended mathematical model of the IEEE 123-node test feeder was used for generating faulty waveforms of voltage and currents

  • The extended mathematical model of the IEEE 123-node test feeder was used for generating faulty of voltage and currents

  • The secondary test set was capable of replaying imported transient waveforms as physical currents andreference voltages fault or optionally sampled values to International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) 61850-9-2LE

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Summary

Motivation and Literature Review

The architecture of future power systems will change significantly, shifting from the centralized paradigm of production to the decentralized concept of a large number of prosumers enabling the transition to flexible low-carbon-energy systems [1]. This large number of interactive distributed units creates new technical challenges in deploying different Smart Grid concepts such as virtual power plants [2], microgrids [3], or digital substations [4]. The guidelines are not a completely new standard, but rather an extended set of technical requirements set up to avoid interoperability issues [7]

Contributions
IEC 61850 Standard Basics
Simplified
Testing
Testing Environment for Intelligent Electronic Devices
IEEE Distribution Test Feeder
Testing Environment-Sampled Value Communication
Test Results
Further Test Scenarios
Automated
Conclusions
Full Text
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