Analysis of medium voltage vacuum switchgear through advanced condition monitoring, trending and diagnostic techniques

Abstract

A research report submitted to the Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Engineering, 2015Electrical utilities are tasked with managing large numbers of assets that have long useful lives and are fairly expensive to replace. With emphasis on medium voltage vacuum circuit breakers, a key challenge is determining when circuit breakers are close to their end-of-life and what the appropriate action at that point in time should be. Condition-based maintenance, intended to “do only what is required, when it is required,” has been reported as the most effective maintenance strategy for circuit breakers. This dissertation provides an overview, together with laboratory measurements, on non-intrusive technologies and analytics that could reduce maintenance costs, unplanned outages, catastrophic failures and even enhance the reliability and lifetime of circuit breakers by means of a real-time condition monitoring and effective failure prevention maintenance approach. The key areas of research are the condition assessment of the mechanical mechanism based on coil current signature diagnosis, degradation detection of the main interrupting contacts through thermal monitoring and interrupter vacuum integrity assessment based on magnetron atmospheric condition (MAC) testing. The information from test results allows both immediate onsite analysis and trending of key parameters which enables informed asset management decisions to be taken.GS201

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