GE Multilin
G60 Generator Protection System
5-201
5 SETTINGS
5.6 GROUPED ELEMENTS
5
The equation above brings an advantage of generating the restraining signal of twice the external ground fault current,
while reducing the restraint below the internal ground fault current. The negative-sequence component of the restraining
signal (IR2) is meant to provide maximum restraint during external phase-to-phase faults and is calculated as follows:
(EQ 5.21)
Following complete de-energization of the windings (all three phase currents below 5% of nominal for at least five cycles),
the relay uses a multiplier of 1 in preparation for the next energization. The multiplier of 3 is used during normal operation;
that is, two cycles after the winding has been energized. The lower multiplier is used to ensure better sensitivity when ener-
gizing a faulty winding.
The positive-sequence component of the restraining signal (IR1) is meant to provide restraint during symmetrical condi-
tions, either symmetrical faults or load, and is calculated according to the following algorithm:
1 If
of phase CT, then
2
If ,
then
3
else
4 else
Under load-level currents (below 150% of nominal), the positive-sequence restraint is set to 1/8th of the positive-sequence
current (line 4). This is to ensure maximum sensitivity during low-current faults under full load conditions. Under fault-level
currents (above 150% of nominal), the positive-sequence restraint is removed if the zero-sequence component is greater
than the positive-sequence (line 3), or set at the net difference of the two (line 2).
The raw restraining signal (Irest) is further post-filtered for better performance during external faults with heavy CT satura-
tion and for better switch-off transient control:
(EQ 5.22)
where k represents a present sample, k – 1 represents the previous sample, and
α
is a factory constant (
α <
1). The equa-
tion above introduces a decaying memory to the restraining signal. Should the raw restraining signal (Irest) disappear or
drop significantly, such as when an external fault gets cleared or a CT saturates heavily, the actual restraining signal (Igr(k))
will not reduce instantly but will keep decaying decreasing its value by 50% each 15.5 power system cycles.
Having the differential and restraining signals developed, the element applies a single slope differential characteristic with a
minimum pickup as shown in the logic diagram below.
Figure 5–97: RESTRICTED GROUND FAULT SCHEME LOGIC
IR2
I_2
=
or IR2
3
I_2
×
=
I_1
2 pu
>
I_1
I_0
>
IR1
3
I_1
I_0
–
(
)
×
=
IR1
0
=
IR1
I_1 8
⁄
=
Igr k
( )
max Irest k
( ) α
Igr k 1
–
(
)
×
,
(
)
=
SETTING
SETTING
SETTING
SETTING
SETTINGS
SETTING
FLEXLOGIC OPERANDS
ACTUAL VALUES
RESTD GND FT1
FUNCTION:
RESTD GND FT1
BLOCK:
RESTD GND FT1
SOURCE:
RESTD GND FT1
PICKUP:
RESTD GND FT1 RESET
DELAY:
RESTD GND FT1 PICKUP
DELAY:
RESTD GND FT1
SLOPE:
RESTD GND FT1 OP
RESTD GND FT1 DPO
RESTD GND FT1 PKP
RGF 1 Igd Mag
RGF 1 Igr Mag
Off=0
Enabled=1
AND
828002A3.CDR
RUN
RUN
Igd > PICKUP
IN
IG
I_0
I_1
I_2
AND
>
SLOPE
*
Igd
Igr
Differential
and
Restraining
Currents
tPKP
tRST
Summary of Contents for Multilin g60
Page 10: ...x G60 Generator Protection System GE Multilin TABLE OF CONTENTS INDEX ...
Page 32: ...1 22 G60 Generator Protection System GE Multilin 1 5 USING THE RELAY 1 GETTING STARTED 1 ...
Page 160: ...4 30 G60 Generator Protection System GE Multilin 4 3 FACEPLATE INTERFACE 4 HUMAN INTERFACES 4 ...
Page 486: ...5 326 G60 Generator Protection System GE Multilin 5 10 TESTING 5 SETTINGS 5 ...
Page 518: ...6 32 G60 Generator Protection System GE Multilin 6 5 PRODUCT INFORMATION 6 ACTUAL VALUES 6 ...
Page 532: ...7 14 G60 Generator Protection System GE Multilin 7 2 TARGETS 7 COMMANDS AND TARGETS 7 ...
Page 748: ...D 10 G60 Generator Protection System GE Multilin D 1 IEC 60870 5 104 APPENDIX D D ...
Page 760: ...E 12 G60 Generator Protection System GE Multilin E 2 DNP POINT LISTS APPENDIX E E ...