Abstract
Various conductor corona test methods have been used to predict corona performance of HVAC transmission lines. Due to the formation and build-up of space charge, it is unclear whether the same methods can be used for corona performance of HVDC conductors. We investigate the use of a large corona cage, a short test line, and a small corona cage at high altitude to generate RI data. Wideband excitation functions are derived using time- and frequency-domain techniques. These generation functions are compared to CISPR standard narrowband measurements as well as published empirical RI prediction formulas. We find that a small corona cage cannot be used to accurately predict the RI performance of HVDC transmission lines at high altitude.
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