The ac secondary network system is the system
that has been used for many years to distribute electric power in the high density,
downtown areas of cities, usually in the form of utility grids. Modifications
of this type of system make it applicable to serve loads within buildings.
The
major advantage of the secondary network system is continuity of service. No
single fault anywhere on the primary system will interrupt service to any of
the system’s loads. Most faults will be cleared without interrupting service to
any load. Another outstanding advantage that the network system offers is its
flexibility to meet changing and growing load conditions at minimum cost and minimum
interruption in service to other loads on the network. In addition to flexibility
and service reliability, the secondary network system provides exceptionally
uniform and good voltage regulation, and its high efficiency materially reduces
the costs of system losses.
Three major differences between the network system
and the simple radial system account for the outstanding advantages of the
network. First, a network protector is connected in the secondary leads of each
network transformer in place of, or in addition to, the secondary main breaker,
as shown in Figure 1.1-39. Also, the secondaries
of each transformer in a given location (spot) are connected together by a switchgear
or ring bus from which the loads are served over short radial feeder circuits.
Finally, the primary supply has sufficient capacity to carry the entire building
load without overloading when any one primary feeder is out of service.
A
network protector is a specially designed heavy-duty air power breaker, spring
close with electrical motor-charged mechanism, with a network relay to control
the status of the protector (tripped or closed).
The network relay is usually a
solid-state microprocessor-based component integrated into the protector
enclosure that functions to automatically close the protector only when the
voltage conditions are such that its associated transformer will supply power
to the secondary network loads. It also serves to automatically open the
protector when power flows from the secondary to the network transformer.
The
purpose of the network protector is to protect the integrity of the network bus
voltage and the loads served from it against transformer and primary feeder faults
by quickly disconnecting the defective feeder-transformer pair from the network
when backfeed occurs.
The simple spot network system resembles the
secondary-selective radial system in that each load area is supplied over two
or more primary feeders through two or more transformers. In network systems,
the transformers are connected through network protectors to a common bus, as
shown in Figure 1.1-39, from which loads are
served. Because the transformers are connected in parallel, a primary feeder or
transformer fault does not cause any service interruption to the loads.
The
paralleled transformers supplying each load bus will normally carry equal load
currents, whereas equal loading of the two separate transformers supplying a substation
in the secondary-selective radial system is difficult to obtain. The
interrupting duty imposed on the outgoing feeder breakers in the network will
be greater with the spot network system.
The optimum size and number of primary
feeders can be used in the spot network system because the loss of any primary
feeder and its associated transformers does not result in the loss of any load even
for an instant. In spite of the spare capacity usually supplied in network systems,
savings in primary switchgear and secondary switchgear costs often result when
compared to a radial system design with similar spare capacity.
This occurs in
many radial systems because more and smaller feeders are often used in order to
minimize the extent of any outage when a primary fault event occurs.
In spot
networks, when a fault occurs on a primary feeder or in a transformer, the fault
is isolated from the system through the automatic tripping of the primary
feeder circuit breaker and all of the network protectors associated with that feeder
circuit. This operation does not interrupt service to any loads. After the necessary
repairs have been made, the system can be restored to normal operating conditions
by closing the primary feeder breaker. All network protectors associated with
that feeder will close automatically.
The chief purpose of the network bus normally
closed ties is to provide for the sharing of loads and a balancing of load
currents for each primary service and transformer regardless of the condition of
the primary services.
Also, the ties provide a means for isolating and
sectionalizing ground fault events within the switchgear network bus, thereby
saving a portion of the loads from service interruptions, yet isolating the faulted
portion for corrective action.
The use of spot network systems provides users with
several important advantages. First, they save transformer capacity. Spot
networks permit equal loading of transformers under all conditions. Also, networks
yield lower system losses and greatly improve voltage conditions.
Figure 1.1-39. Three-Source Spot Network
The
voltage regulation on a network system is such that both lights and power can
be fed from the same load bus. Much larger motors can be started across-the-line
than on a simple radial system. This can result in simplified motor control and
permits the use of relatively large low voltage motors with their less
expensive control.
Finally, network systems provide a greater degree of
flexibility in adding future loads; they can be connected to the closest spot
network bus.
Spot network systems are economical for buildings that have heavy concentrations
of loads covering small areas, with considerable distance between areas, and
light loads within the distances separating the concentrated loads. They are
commonly used in hospitals, high rise office buildings, institutional buildings
or laboratories where a high degree of service reliability is required from the
utility sources. Spot network systems are especially economical where three or
more primary feeders are available.
Principally, this is due to supplying each
load bus through three or more transformers and the reduction in spare cable
and transformer capacity required.
They are also economical when compared to
two transformer doubleended substations with normally opened tie breakers.
Emergency
power should be connected to network loads downstream from the network, or
upstream at primary voltage, not at the network bus itself.
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