Under ideal conditions, the electromagnetic interference experienced by the secondary circuit is manifested as a common mode. However, due to circuit imbalance, common mode disturbance is converted into differential mode disturbance, thereby presenting a danger to the normal functioning of secondary equipment. The investigation measured the distribution ratio of common mode voltages and differential mode voltages at the ports of secondary equipment during switching operations. A computational circuit model of the secondary circuit was established by using multi-conductor transmission line theory. The mechanisms and influencing factors of transformation from common mode to differential mode were analyzed, and a simulation test was carried out in a substation to explore the conversion law under impedance imbalance. The results showed that the differential mode voltage of the secondary equipment port was greater than the common mode voltage when the circuit breaker was in operation. Common-differential mode conversion in the secondary loop was predominantly caused by an imbalance in circuit structure and extraneous parameters. Differential mode disturbance generated by switch field side imbalance had a greater impact than that generated by protection chamber side imbalance. As the degree of imbalance increased, the differential mode voltage also increased.
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