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 ln1 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 ln1 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 ln1 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 ln1 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 ln1 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 14.41.08 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 14.41.08 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 14.41.08 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?