Abstract

Traditional connection of a generating station to the transmission grid typically requires either a new transmission line to an existing substation or building a new substation to segment an existing transmission line. Both of these options are capital intensive which often hurts economic viability especially small- or medium-size nonconventional generating stations. The direct connection to an existing transmission line, without the switching station, is the most economical solution to interconnect the generating station but it desensitizes the line protection and poses a risk to the ability of the protection to detect faults, particularly ground faults involving fault resistances. Multifunction relays, combined with communication-assisted schemes, now offer innovative solutions to overcome protection desensitization concerns. This paper describes these solutions which are successfully implemented by a large Canadian electric utility over the last two decades to tap connect numerous generators to the transmission grid.

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