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Current Transformer Sizing Guide

1) Current transformers (CTs) are used to supply a reduced current to instruments while providing galvanic isolation and safety grounding. 2) CT saturation can occur during high fault currents, causing errors in current magnitude and angle that impact protective relays. 3) To avoid saturation, the maximum fault current and connected burdens must be below the CT's rated terminal voltage, which is defined by standards.

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50% found this document useful (4 votes)
3K views62 pages

Current Transformer Sizing Guide

1) Current transformers (CTs) are used to supply a reduced current to instruments while providing galvanic isolation and safety grounding. 2) CT saturation can occur during high fault currents, causing errors in current magnitude and angle that impact protective relays. 3) To avoid saturation, the maximum fault current and connected burdens must be below the CT's rated terminal voltage, which is defined by standards.

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pccluster
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Current Transformer Sizing

(August 19th, 2010)


By: Siva Singupuram
James Trinh
Agenda
• Current Transformer (CT) introduction
• Mathematical Modeling
• Saturated Waveforms
• CT saturation (Hysteresis Curve)
• Remnant Flux, High Fault Currents, DC offset
• Saturation Voltage,
• CT ratings, Selection and Applications
• ElectroMagnetic Transients Program (EMTP)/
PSCAD
Introduction CT types
Donut Hall Effect CT Magneto-Optical

Bus Bar
Typical Current Transformers
Introduction Application
• Current Transformers (CT’s) are instrument transformers that are used to
supply a reduced value of current to metering, protective relays, and
other instruments. CT’s provide galvanic isolation from the high voltage
primary, permit grounding of the secondary for safety, and step-down the
magnitude of the measured current to a value that can be safely handled
by the instruments (high fault currents).
• To achieve the above goals CT contains
1) Iron Core
2) Secondary windings
3) Primary conductor
4) External insulation
CT Symbols
• When current flows in the CT from the H1 lead polarity (±) lead through,
the burden (load), and return to the secondary X2 non-polarity lead. The
next half cycle the current will reverse.

ANSI IEC
Current Transformer (CT) Principle

Electrical Schematic 3D-Representation


CT Connections
ANSI Standard Letter Designation
• B-The CT is a metering type
• C-The CT has low leakage flux and the excitation characteristic can be
used directly to determine performance. (Accuracy can be calculated
before manufacturing)
• K-Same as the C rating, but the knee point voltage must be at least 70% of
the secondary terminal voltage rating.
• T-The CT can have significant leakage flux (Accuracy must be determined
by testing at the factory)
• H-The CT accuracy is applicable within the entire range of secondary
currents from 5 to 20 time the nominal CT rating. (Typically wound CTs)
• L-Same as C class except there were two accuracy classes 2.5% and 10%.
The ratio accuracy can be up to four times greater than the listed value,
depending on connected burden and fault current. (Typically window,
busing, or bar-type CTs)
• L and H ANSI rating are applicable to old CT that where manufactured
before 1954
ANSI Standard Terminal Voltage
Class C CTs
VSTD  20 I N Z STD
For IN = 5A secondary

C Class ZSTD (Ω) VSTD (V)


C100 1.0 100
C200 2.0 200
C400 4.0 400
C800 8.0 800
Metering Accuracy Classifications
• Metering Accuracy CT’s are used where a high degree of accuracy is
required from low-load values up to full-load of a system. These are
utilized by utility companies for revenue metering.

Available in Maximum Ratio Error Classes of: ±0.3%, ±0.6%, ±1.2%, ±2.4%
For Burdens (Loads) of: 0.1Ω, 0.2Ω, 0.5Ω, 0.9Ω, 1.8Ω
Volt-amperes (va) equivalent: 2.5va, 5.0va, 12.5va, 22.5va, 45va

Typical Number
0.3 B 0.2

Max Ratio Error ±% Burden Ohms (Burden)


Relaying Accuracy Classifications
• Relaying Accuracy CT’s are used for supplying current to protective relays.
In this application, the relays do not normally operate in the normal load
range, but they must perform with a reasonable degree of accuracy at
very high overload and fault-current levels which may reach 20x the full-
load amplitude.
Class C (C for calculated) is low leakage reactance type – typical of donut units – Formerly Class L (L for Low Leakage)

Class T (T for tested) is high leakage reactance type – typical of bar-type units – Formerly Class H (H for High Leakage)
Typical Number
10 C 800

10% Max Ratio Error at 20x Rated Current Max secondary voltage developed at 20x rated current
Low Leakage Unit without exceeding the +10% ratio error

Available secondary voltages: 100V, 200V, 400V, 800V

Burden support (ZSTD): 1.0Ω, 2.0Ω, 4.0Ω, 8.0Ω


CT Knee point

ANSI Method
CT Knee point

ANSI Method
IEC Method
Shorting of CT when not used
• CT’s can be very dangerous devices! Stepping
down the current means that the voltage is
automatically stepped up the same ratio. The
secondary's of the CT’s are, therefore; always
kept shorted when not in use and/or when no
low impedance ammeter is connected! On the
open-circuited secondary of a CT, just a few
volts on the primary voltage would become a
lethal thousands of volts on the secondary.
CT Equivalent Circuit

Ip
Is   Ie
Ns
Vs  I s ( Rs  jX s )  I s Z LOAD
Hysteresis/Residual Flux
Referring to figure on the left, if H is
gradually increased from zero to H1, the
magnetization follows path oa. Decreasing
H back to zero will leave the material
magnetized at a B-value corresponding to
point b. Distance ob on the B axis is called
the “Residual Flux Density”. To bring B back
to zero requires a negative value of H
corresponding to point c on the cure.
Distance oc on the H-axis is called the
Coercive Force. Decreasing H to H2=-H1
results in the B-value of point d. Finally
increasing H back to the original H1 now
causes the magnetization to traverse path
defa. The latter path is nearly equivalent to
path abcd, but flipped about the B and H
axes. Path abcdefa is called a hysteresis
loop which occurs when an AC voltage is
applied to a coil on a ferromagnetic core. As
the voltage and current cycle between their
max and min values, the core magnetization
repeatedly traverses a hysteresis loop.
Remanent Flux (Information Only)
Based on IEEE survey of 141 cts on a 230kV system

Remanent Flux % Percentage of cts


0-20 39
21-40 18
41-60 16
61-80 27
DC offset
Saturation Occurs
CT Errors impact

Errors to in currents magnitude and angle will have a


significant effect on protection relays particularly (directional
(67), distance (21), and differentials (87))
CT terminal Voltage (Vgh)
R
t t  t
N  BAN    vdt    2 I F ( Z B  RS )(cos t  e L
)dt 
0 0

1 L  Lt L 
R
  2 I F  Z B  RS   sin t  e   
 R R

 2 I F ( Z B  RS )  L  RL t L 
  sin t  e   
  R R

 2 I F ( Z B  RS )  X  X t X 
R
  sin t  e   
  R R

 X  X t X 
R
BAN   2 I F ( Z B  RS ) sin t  e  
 R R
CT terminal Voltage (Vgh)
 X
 BAN  max  2 I F ( Z B  RS )1  
 R
Re call :  BAN  max  VS max

 X
VS max  2 I F ( Z B  RS )1  
 R
 X
Vgh _ max  2 I F Z B 1  
 R
Vgh _ max  X
 I F Z B 1  
2  R
CT terminal Voltage (Vgh)
Vgh _ max  X
 I F Z B 1  
2  R
Vgh _ max
 VSTD  20 I N Z STD
2
 X
I F Z B 1    VSTD
 R
Re call : VSTD  20 I N Z STD

 X IF ZB  X
I F Z B 1    20 I N Z STD 1    20
 R I N Z STD  R
To Avoid CT saturation
IF ZB  X  X
1    20 1   I f Z b  20
I N Z STD  R  R
I F  Max Fault Current
Z B  Burden from the CT’s point of view (CT + Cable Leads + Relays)
wdg

I N  CT primary rating if I is given in primary Amps or


F

 CT secondary rating if I is given in secondary Amps


F

Z STD  Standard Burden = 1, 2, 4, 8 Ω (at 60°)

If  Max Fault in per unit of CT secondary nominal Current

Zb  Burden in per unit of standard burden


Limitation of CT Selection Criterion
• We face high X/R ratio and high fault currents
near generation sites. This becomes impractical
to size the CT to avoid saturation during a
asymmetrical fault. The formula derived earlier
should not be used for this study and we must
size the CT with reasonable sensitivity for line
end faults
• For this situation we should analyze in further
detail via EMTP simulation.
Example #1
C800
2000/5 (full ratio)
If = 3.07 pu
Zb = 0.5 pu
X/R = 12
 X
1   I f Z b  20
 R

(1+12)(3.07)(0.5) ≤ 20 ?
19.955 ≤ 20 CT OK!
Example #1 Example #2
C800 C800
2000/5 (full ratio) 2000/5 (full ratio)
If = 3.07 pu If = 7.69 pu
Zb = 0.5 pu Zb = 0.5 pu
X/R = 12 X/R = 12
 X  X
1   I f Z b  20 1   I f Z b  20
 R  R

(1+12)(3.07)(0.5) ≤ 20 ? (1+12)(7.69)(0.5) ≤ 20 ?
19.955 ≤ 20 CT OK! 49.985 > 20 CT Saturates
Time to Saturate
 K s 1 
  X
Ts  T1 ln1  X  T1 
 R  R
 
 
Ts  time to saturate
ln  Natural log function
T1  primary system time constant
K s  the saturation factor V /V , where V
x s xis the excitation voltage at
10A and, Vs is the saturation voltage IF x ZB
  2πf, where f is the system frequency
X  Reactance of the primary system to the point of the fault
R  Resistance of the primary system to the point of the fault
Waveforms
Waveforms
Multi-Ratio CTs
1200/5, C800 tapped at 600/5
C400 effective rating
4.0 Ω effective standard burden

600
EffectiveRating  800  400
1200

600
Effective _ Std _ Burden  8  4
1200
CT winding Resistance

Typical turn ratio resistance = 2.5mΩ/turn


2000
For example a 2000:5 ratio CT; 2000 / 5  2.5m  1.0
5
Lead Resistance Calculation
Formula to determine Copper lead resistance
Lead resistance, Ω/1000’ = e0.232G-2.32
where, G = AWG number

For a 10AWG cable at (305m = 1000’)


R = e0.232(10) -2.32 = e0 = 1Ω/1000’
Similarly for 8AWG cable at (305m = 1000’)
R = e0.232(8) -2.32 = 0.629Ω/1000’
10AWG cable at (152m = 500’) will have a resistance of
R = 1Ω/1000’x500’ = 0.5Ω
CT Application
Type of Fault
Connection 3 ph or ph-to-ph Ph-to-ground

Wye (connect at CT) Z = RS + RL + ZR Z = RS + 2RL + ZR


Wye (connected at switchhouse) Z = RS + 2RL + ZR Z = RS + 2RL + ZR
Delta (connected at switchhouse) Z = RS + 2RL +3 ZR Z = RS + 2RL +3 ZR
Delta (connected at CT) Z = RS + 3RL +3 ZR Z = RS + 2RL +2 ZR
Z is the effective impedance seen by the CT
RS is the CT secondary winding resistance and CT lead resistance; also
includes any relay impedance that is inside the delta connection (Ω)
RL is the circuit one-way lead resistance (Ω)
ZR is the relay impedance in the CT secondary current path (Ω)
IEEE typical X/R Ratios
IEEE typical X/R Ratios
IEEE typical X/R Ratios
IEEE typical X/R Ratios
IEEE typical X/R Ratios
Parameters for X/R & SCC Example
Given Parameters
SCC = 7316A @ V=240kV
X/R = 12
Transformer size = 50MVA; 240/138kV
Zxmfr = 8.0%

Solve for X/R at 138kV.


Solve for SCC at 138kV.
Example for X/R
Step #1: Calculate the equivalent source impedance

% Z source   KVAtransformer / KVAshortcircuit  x100


KVAshortcircuit  3  kVLL  SCC

KVAshortcircuit  3  240kV  7316 A  3,041,204.09kVA


% Z source   50,000kVA / 3,041,204.09kVA  x100  1.644%
Example for X/R
Step #2: Source R and X

X
1 X  Sin * Z
  tan  
R R  Cos * Z

% Z source  1.644
X / R  12
  tan 1 12  85.24
X  Sin(85.24) * (1.644%)  1.638%
R  Cos (85.18) * (1.644%)  0.138%
Example for X/R
Step #3: Transformer R and X

% Z xmfr  8.0
X / R  15 (From IEEE typical value)

  tan 1 15  86.19


X  Sin(86.19) * (8.0%)  7.982%
R  Cos (86.19) * (8.0%)  0.531%
Example for X/R
Step #4: Total Resistance and Reactance at 138kV

Rtotal  Rsource  Rxmfr  0.138%  0.531%  0.669%

X total  X source  X xmfr  1.638%  7.982%  9.62%

Step #5: X/R at138kV

X X total 9.622%
   14.4
R Rtotal 0.669%
Example for SCC
Step #1: Calculate the equivalent source impedance

% Z source   KVAtransformer / KVAshortcircuit  x100


KVAshortcircuit  3  kVLL  SCC

KVAshortcircuit  3  240kV  7316 A  3,041,204.09kVA


% Z source   50,000kVA / 3,041,204.09kVA  x100  1.644%
Example for SCC
Step #2: Calculate the 138kV side full load current

kVA xmfr
FLALV 
3kVLL

50,000kVA
FLALV   209.18 A
3 (138kV )
Example for SCC
Step #3: Calculate the short circuit current on the 138kV side

FLALV 100
SCC LV 
(% Z xmfr  % Z source )

209.18 A 100
SCC LV   2,169.06 A
(8.0%  1.644%)
Global Example
C200
400/5 (full ratio)
IF = 7,316A (HV side)
X/R = 15 (HV side faults)
One-way RL length = 152m (500’)
Determine what CT Class and Ratio is valid
on the 138kV

240kV 138kV
Global Example
Case #1) From previous slide for X/R and SCC on the 138kV side.

X X 9.622%
 total   14.4
R Rtotal 0.669%

For a C200: ZSTD = 2.0Ω

Rone-way = 1Ω/1000’x500’ = 0.5Ω


ZB = RS + 2RL + ZR
ZB = 0.2Ω + 2(0.5Ω) + 0.1Ω=1.3
Note: 0.1Ω = digital & 1.0 Ω for electromechanical

ZB 1.3
Zb    0.7 pu
Z STD 2.0
Global Example
From previous slide for X/R and SCC on the 138kV side.

209.18 A 100
SCC LV   2,169.06 A
(8.0%  1.644%)

IF 2,169 A
If    5.5 pu
IN 400 A

 X
 1   I f Z b  20 ?
 R
1  14.4 5.5  0.7  60 CT Saturates
Global Example
 Ks 1 
 
Ts  T1 ln1  X 
 R 
 
 
X 14.4
T1    0.038s
R 377
 2169 A 
VS  I F Z B   (1.3)  35.3V
 400 / 5 
Vx  230V Taken from excitation Curve at IE = 10A (full ratio)
VX 230V
Ks    6.33
Vs 35.3V
 8.5  1 
 
Ts  0.038 ln1  X   19ms  ( 1cycle)
 R 
 
 
Global Example
Case #2 Choosing C400 (2000/5 tapped at 600/5).

600
Effective _ Std _ Burden  4  1.2
2000

ZB 1.41
Zb    1.18 pu ZB = 1.4Ω due to 600/5 ratio CT winding resistance.
Z STD 1.2

IF 2,169 A
If    3.62 pu
IN 600 A

 X
 1   I f Z b  20 ?
 R

1  14.4 3.62 1.18  66 CT Saturates


Global Example
 K s 1 
 
Ts  T1 ln1  X 
 R 
 
 
X 14.4
T1    0.038s
R 377
 2169 A 
VS  I F Z B   (1.41)  25.5V
 600 / 5 
Vx  150V Taken from exication Curves and at IE = 10A (600/5)
VX 150V
Ks    5.8
Vs 25.5V
 5. 8  1 
 
Ts  0.038 ln1  X   11ms  1cycle
 R 
 
 
Global Example
Case #3 Choosing C400 (2000/5 full ratio).

For a C400: ZSTD = 4.0Ω

ZB 2.1
Zb    0.525 pu ZB = 2.1Ω due to 2000/5 ratio CT winding resistance.
Z STD 4.0

IF 2,169 A
If    1.08 pu
IN 2000 A

 X
 1   I f Z b  20 ?
 R

1  14.41.08  0.525  8.73 CT OK


Global Example
Case #4 Choosing C400 (2000/5 full ratio with 80% remenant flux).

 X
 1   I f Z b  20 * (1  80%)  4 ?
 R
1  14.41.08  0.525  8.73 CT Saturates

Case #4 Choosing C400 (2000/5 full ratio with 50% remenant flux).

 X
 1   I f Z b  20 * (1  50%)  10 ?
 R
1  14.41.08  0.525  8.73 CT OK
IEEE PSRC CALCULATOR
Saturation Curve
Vs
s lo p e
= 1 /S
m f g r 's
Ve d a ta
v o lts lo g - lo g p lo t ,
rm s equal
decade
s p a c in g

Ie a m p s rm s 10

The Saturation Curve above is represented by the following equation


1
log Ve  log I e  log Vi
S

Where Vi is the value of Ve for Ie=1, that is for (log Ie=0)


Measuring the ‘S’

HOW TO MEASURE THE SLOPE

Use a ruler to determine the slope.

10
Do NOT read currents or voltages for this purpose.
(We assume equal decade spacing of the axes)

9
8
7
6
Ruler, inches or centimeters

5
4
slope = 0.7/9.3 = 1/S

3
2
S = 9.3/0.7 = 13

1
0
IEEE PSRC CALCULATOR EXAMPLE
Case #1) From previous slide for X/R and SCC on the 138kV side.
EMTP/PSCAD SIMULATION
• The CTs are subject to saturation during DC transient
of fault current , hence there is growing interest in
simulations like EMTP/PSCAD.
• The IEEE-PSRC CT calculator is only accurate at high
fault currents and burden , hence to get better idea of
CT performance at low fault currents/ burden we need
to model in PSCAD/EMTP.
• The primary aim of PSCAD simulation is to obtain
digitized records, which can be recognized as
secondary analog signal using D/A conversion and
amplification, for the purpose of relay testing.
EMTP/PSCAD SIMULATION
PSCAD -CT Modeling
QUESTIONS?

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