Main Exciter
The time constant Te of the exciter is mainly related to its field winding. The saturation block in Figure 4.1 accounts for the magnetic saturation of the iron core of the exciter, and it is important to represent this because the expected range of the performance of the exciter is wide. Its terminal voltage may have a value of typically 3.0 per unit when the generator is fully loaded. This may increase to about 6.5 per unit when the generator needs to maintain a full short circuit at or near to its terminals. The maximum excitation voltage is called the ‘ceiling voltage’ of the exciter.
The AVR system requires a source of power for its amplifier, its reference voltage and other electronic circuits that may be involved e.g. alarms. There are several methods of obtaining this necessary power,
• An external power supply.
• Self-excitation.
• Pilot exciter.
An external supply could be an uninterrupted power supply (UPS) that is dedicated to the generator. Although this is feasible it is not a method that is used, the main reason being that it departs from the requirement of self-containment. The equipment involved would require external cables and switchgear, both of which add a factor of unreliability to the scheme.
The self-excitation method relies upon the residual magnetism in the iron core of the main generator that remains in the core after the generator is shut down. When the generator is started again and run up to speed a small emf is generated by the residual magnetism. A special circuit detects the residual emf at the main terminals and amplifies it to a predetermined level. This amplified voltage is rendered insensitive to a wide range of emf values and has sufficient power to feed all the auxiliary requirements of the AVR. The advantage of this method is its low cost compared with using a pilot exciter. Its main disadvantage is an inferior performance when a short circuit occurs at or near the main generator. The detected emf, or terminal voltage, when the generator is connected to the busbars, falls to near zero when the short circuit exists. The AVR may lose its supply during this period or perform in an unpredictable manner. The excitation of the generator may collapse, which is not desirable.
The pilot exciter method is highly reliable and has a fully predictable performance. A small alternator is mounted on the same shaft, and often within the same frame, as the main exciter. It receives its excitation from a shaft mounted permanent magnet rotor system. Hence its level of excitation is constant and dependable. The AC output from the pilot exciter is rectified and smoothed by components within the AVR cubicle. It can be seen that this method is completely independent of the conditions existing in the main generator. This is the method usually specified in the oil industry.
1 Comments:
Write CommentsNice
Reply