MBfreak
MEMBER EMERITUS
Much of the electrical power we use today is generated by large prime movers ( turbines , mostly) driving large three phase generators.
However, an increasing amount comes from wind turbines ( each unit up to maybe 20MW) and large scale PV farms.
Germany is a prime example. Around 60 % of electrical energy per day often comes from windfarms and PV.
To start the technical part, here is a description of a large generator, the CB and step up transformer feeding the transmission network:
Hydro power plants usually run below 100 rpm and have generators with many poles. Some rotors are 15 m in diameter. The stator lamination is huge and transported to site in parts, assembled and most often the premade wirings are installed in the stator winding slots at site. ALL are wye connected. The neutral point is connected to ground thro a NER ( Neutral Earthing Resistor). A ground fault in the winding will be limited ta 15 A and NOT burn the lamination.
Voltages are 27,5 kV or lower and the stator winding is VERY complicated with several cooling systems built in. Winding are also transposed to get similar reactances in all parts. Theoretical and engineering knowledge levels are outstanding after > 100 years of manufacturing
Turbine poser plant generators usually run from 1500 to 3600 RPM, and power levels are 200 to 1900 MVA, ie 160 to 1600 MW. Most often hydrogen cooling and very complicated non-friction bearing assemlies. The design of the largest generators is half known and half guessed. The rotor can be 12 m long and 2,3 m in diameter at 1500 rpm. Rotor winding is a wonder, it has to stay equally distributed on the rotor at high speed and very large magnetic disturbances. I was involved in a plant that took the mfr 15 months to understand and rectify unbalances when rotor run at full power ( Excitation power 10 kV DC at 9,8 MW)
And that is easy compared to the very advanced math and physics needed to calculate and dampen the magnetic forces in the u-shaped winding transfer from one stator track to the next.
Generator is mounted on a 2 to 3 m thich concrete pad.
Large powerstation connect the stator phasor windings ( always below 27,5 kV) to a sometimes generator CB ( not common in the US) and then to a delta connected large power transformer ( often 3 off single phase units) thru aluminiom busducts where each phase has an outer earthed pipe, dia 1200 mm with a coaxial pipe conductor appr 600 mm. The magnetic forces in this system is impressive. Especially at a near short circuit fault in the HV transmission. Short circuit current may amount to 950 kA over many milliseconds. A 2 or 3 phase short in the busduct ( ie several earth faults) or in the LV side in te step up transformer will result in large scale damage where 1000 of kilos of aluminum is evaporated and generator end shields buckle. ( They are often 120 MM steel)
The generator is excited thru a large thyristor rectifier with VERY advanced control, to be compatible with network rules for stability control-
The generator has large current transformers and voltage transformers as input to a relay protection system with up to 50 different functions, from simple overcurrent to advanced computer based 100 % earth fault detection. ( Only available since 2009)
One very difficult issue is to keep a 1500 MW nuclear power station running for 250 ms at a dead short circuit very close to the step up transformers HV bushings.
Typical people involved in design, manufacturing, testing, installation and test runs:
Machine shops with super skilled people and machines
Plate shops with licensed people for hydrogen tanks with up to 100 cubic meter of hydrogen at 2,2 MPa
Winding manufacturer
Assembly workers
Heavy duty transport ( 600 tons, often by ship)
Riggers and installers
Test engineers
A few scientists that know everything about magnetic hi intensite bessel fields
Many design engineers, from how to run PT100 leads in hi magnetic fields to excitation rectifiers.
And why do i list all of this?
To try to make you respect some of the efforts that results in three phase power to your shop.
I am actually most impresse by the steam turbines. Last low pressure stage at 1500 rpm has peripheral speed og 2,3 time sound velocity.
Mechanical clearances very small. Impossible for me to understand
My knowledge on wind turbibes and PV farms is close to zero.
Next input will be a few snippets of theories and math for above
Ola
However, an increasing amount comes from wind turbines ( each unit up to maybe 20MW) and large scale PV farms.
Germany is a prime example. Around 60 % of electrical energy per day often comes from windfarms and PV.
To start the technical part, here is a description of a large generator, the CB and step up transformer feeding the transmission network:
Hydro power plants usually run below 100 rpm and have generators with many poles. Some rotors are 15 m in diameter. The stator lamination is huge and transported to site in parts, assembled and most often the premade wirings are installed in the stator winding slots at site. ALL are wye connected. The neutral point is connected to ground thro a NER ( Neutral Earthing Resistor). A ground fault in the winding will be limited ta 15 A and NOT burn the lamination.
Voltages are 27,5 kV or lower and the stator winding is VERY complicated with several cooling systems built in. Winding are also transposed to get similar reactances in all parts. Theoretical and engineering knowledge levels are outstanding after > 100 years of manufacturing
Turbine poser plant generators usually run from 1500 to 3600 RPM, and power levels are 200 to 1900 MVA, ie 160 to 1600 MW. Most often hydrogen cooling and very complicated non-friction bearing assemlies. The design of the largest generators is half known and half guessed. The rotor can be 12 m long and 2,3 m in diameter at 1500 rpm. Rotor winding is a wonder, it has to stay equally distributed on the rotor at high speed and very large magnetic disturbances. I was involved in a plant that took the mfr 15 months to understand and rectify unbalances when rotor run at full power ( Excitation power 10 kV DC at 9,8 MW)
And that is easy compared to the very advanced math and physics needed to calculate and dampen the magnetic forces in the u-shaped winding transfer from one stator track to the next.
Generator is mounted on a 2 to 3 m thich concrete pad.
Large powerstation connect the stator phasor windings ( always below 27,5 kV) to a sometimes generator CB ( not common in the US) and then to a delta connected large power transformer ( often 3 off single phase units) thru aluminiom busducts where each phase has an outer earthed pipe, dia 1200 mm with a coaxial pipe conductor appr 600 mm. The magnetic forces in this system is impressive. Especially at a near short circuit fault in the HV transmission. Short circuit current may amount to 950 kA over many milliseconds. A 2 or 3 phase short in the busduct ( ie several earth faults) or in the LV side in te step up transformer will result in large scale damage where 1000 of kilos of aluminum is evaporated and generator end shields buckle. ( They are often 120 MM steel)
The generator is excited thru a large thyristor rectifier with VERY advanced control, to be compatible with network rules for stability control-
The generator has large current transformers and voltage transformers as input to a relay protection system with up to 50 different functions, from simple overcurrent to advanced computer based 100 % earth fault detection. ( Only available since 2009)
One very difficult issue is to keep a 1500 MW nuclear power station running for 250 ms at a dead short circuit very close to the step up transformers HV bushings.
Typical people involved in design, manufacturing, testing, installation and test runs:
Machine shops with super skilled people and machines
Plate shops with licensed people for hydrogen tanks with up to 100 cubic meter of hydrogen at 2,2 MPa
Winding manufacturer
Assembly workers
Heavy duty transport ( 600 tons, often by ship)
Riggers and installers
Test engineers
A few scientists that know everything about magnetic hi intensite bessel fields
Many design engineers, from how to run PT100 leads in hi magnetic fields to excitation rectifiers.
And why do i list all of this?
To try to make you respect some of the efforts that results in three phase power to your shop.
I am actually most impresse by the steam turbines. Last low pressure stage at 1500 rpm has peripheral speed og 2,3 time sound velocity.
Mechanical clearances very small. Impossible for me to understand
My knowledge on wind turbibes and PV farms is close to zero.
Next input will be a few snippets of theories and math for above
Ola
