Types of Conductors:
There are four
major types of overhead conductors used for electrical transmission and
distribution.
·
AAC - All Aluminum Conductor
·
AAAC - All Aluminum Alloy Conductor
·
ACSR - Aluminum Conductor Steel Reinforced
·
ACAR - Aluminum Conductor Aluminum-Alloy Reinforced
All the major cost components of a transmission line depend upon conductor
physical, mechanical and electrical parameters. A list of these basic
parameters are:
·
conductor diameter
·
weight per unit length
·
conductivity of material(s)
·
crossectional area(s)
·
modulus of elasticity
·
rated breaking strength
·
coefficient(s) of thermal expansion
·
cost of material(s)
·
maximum unloaded design tension
·
resistance to vibration and/or galloping
·
surface shape/drag coefficient
·
fatigue resistance
AAC - All Aluminum Conductor, sometimes referred to as ASC, Aluminum
Stranded Conductor, is made up of one or more strands of 1350 Alloy Aluminum in
the hard drawn H19 temper. 1350 Aluminum Alloy, previously known as EC grade or
electrical conductor grade aluminum, has a minimum conductivity of 61.2% IACS.
Because of its relatively poor strength-to-weight ratio, AAC has had limited
use in transmission lines and rural distribution because of the long spans
utilized. However, AAC has seen extensive use in urban areas where spans are
usually short but high conductivity is required. The excellent corrosion
resistance of aluminum has made AAC a conductor of choice in coastal areas.
ACSR - Aluminum Conductor Steel Reinforced, a standard of the electrical
utility industry since the early 1900's, consists of a solid or stranded steel
core surrounded by one or more layers of strands of 1350 aluminum. Historically,
the amount of steel used to obtain higher strength soon increased to a
substantial portion of the cross-section of the ACSR, but more recently, as
conductors have become larger, the trend has been to less steel content. To
meet varying requirements, ACSR is available in a wide range of steel content -
from 7% by weight for the 36/1 stranding to 40% for the 30/7 stranding. Early
designs of ACSR such as 6/1, 30/7, 30/19, 54/19 and 54/7 strandings featured
high steel content, 26% to 40%, with emphasis on strength perhaps due to fears
of vibration fatigue problems. Today, for larger-than-AWG sizes, the most used
strandings are 18/1, 45/7, 72/7, and 84/19, comprising a range of steel content
from 11% to 18%. For the moderately higher strength 54/19, 54/7, and 26/7
strandings, the steel content is 26%, 26% and 31%, respectively. The
high-strength ACSR 8/1, 12/7 and 16/19 strandings, are used mostly for overhead
ground wires, extra long spans, river crossings, etc.
The inner-core
wires of ACSR may be of zinc coated (galvanized) steel, available in standard
weight Class A coating or heavier coatings of Class B or Class C. Class B
coatings are about twice the thickness of Class A, and Class C coatings about
three times as thick as Class A. The inner cores may also be of aluminum coated
(aluminized) steel or aluminum clad steel. The latter produces a conductor
designated as ACSR/AW in which the aluminum cladding comprises 25% of the area
of the wire, with a minimum coating thickness of 10% of the overall radius. The
reinforcing wires may be in a central core or distributed throughout the cable.
Galvanized or aluminized coats are thin, and are applied to reduce corrosion of
the steel wires. The conductivity of these thin coated core wires is about 8%
IACS. The apparent conductivity of ACSR/AW reinforcement wire is 20.3% IACS.
ACAR - (Aluminum Conductor-Aluminum Alloy Reinforced) - ACAR combines 1350
and 6201 aluminum alloy strands to provide a transmission conductor with an
excellent balance of electrical and mechanical properties. This conductor
consists of one or more layers of 1350-H19 aluminum strands helically wrapped
over one or more 6201-T81 aluminum alloy wires. The core may consist of one or
more 6201 strands. The primary advantage of the ACAR conductor lies in the fact
that all strands are interchangeable between EC and 6201, thereby permitting
the design of a conductor with an optimum balance between mechanical and
electrical characteristics. In effect, ACAR is a composite aluminum-aluminum
alloy conductor which is designed for each application to optimize properties.
Inverse ACAR conductors are also available with the harder 6201 aluminum alloy
wires being on the outer surface of the conductor and the 1350 aluminum making
up the heart of the conductor.
Bundled Conductors - A bundled conductor arrangement with two or more conductors in
parallel, spaced a short distance apart is frequently used for HV and EHV
transmission lines. Many electrical reasons can be cited in favor of bundled
conductors. From the stand point of current density per unit area, smaller
conductors have higher possible current densities, thus greater metal
efficiency. The use of multiple conductors per phase having the same total area
as a single conductor will operate at lower temperatures yielding lower resistances
and losses for equal loads.
Multiple conductors
offer significant improvements in reactance over a single conductor of equal
area. The inductive reactance of a two conductor bundle is only about 50% of
the reactance for a single conductor having the same circular mil area as the
bundled pair. Obviously, the greater the spacing between subconductors, the
lower the reactance.
Although important,
the electrical advantages of bundled conductors may not be the most important
factor influencing their use. The concerns of corona and radio noise may
dictate the use of bundled conductors since corona loss of a conductor is a
function of the voltage gradient at the conductor surface. The subjects of
corona and RIV have been well investigated and will not be further discussed
here.
The number and size
of conductors per phase have not been standardized. It is dependent upon many
factors. Today conductor bundles are a standard design practice for
transmission lines designed to operate at 345 kV or higher.
Any of the above
discussed conductors including VR Cable, can be used as subconductors for
bundle conductor designs. This presents the transmission design engineer with
limitless design options.
No comments:
Post a Comment