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Effects of Modern Variable Speed Drives on Motor Winding Insulation Blake Lloyd, FIEEE Qualitrol - Iris Power [email protected] About Iris Power • Founded in 1990 by 4 individuals from Ontario Hydro's Research Division, one of the largest electrical utilities in North America. • Core Business is CBM Products & Services for machines > 3.3 kV. • Size: ~ 2Employees • Head Office: Toronto • Satellite Offices: – – – – – Houston, Texas Mumbai, India Beijing, China Watford, UK Sao Paulo & Rio de Janeiro, Brazil • + Agents located worldwide My home, Toronto Outline • Characteristics of voltage source PWM drives • Impact on random wound (LV) motor stators • Impact on form wound (MV) stators • New standards to qualify insulation systems for converter fed motors • Offline PD detection under surges • Online PD detection with PWM drives Why VSDs Process control requirements Improved energy conservation below full load Reduced need for gears Less wear and tear during motor starting High Power (>750 HP) AC Drive Sales Billions of $ • • • • $6 $5 $4 $3 $2 $1 $0 04 05 06 Year 07 08 09 WHAT ARE VSDs or CONVERTER FED DRIVES (CFDs) • Converters consist of a rectifier and inverter to create an output voltage of any desired AC frequency • Speed of the motor is directly proportional to the frequency, thus by controlling the AC frequency, can control the speed • The rectifier changes 50/60 Hz AC voltage to DC • The inverter changes DC to AC of a selected frequency • Most common type of converter is the voltage source, pulse width modulated (PWM) converter WHAT ARE VSDs or CONVERTER FED DRIVES (CFDs) • Most common switching device in a converter is the insulated gate bipolar junction transistor (IGBT) • IGBT has very fast turn on time (< 100 ns), which reduces the heat generated by the transistor, and thus reduces drive size and cooling needs • IGBT voltage source PWM drives now operating up to 13.8 kV, using multiple stages 3 Level Converter Output (<690 V) 5 level Converter Output (>2000 V) V U pk/pk t U' pk Oscilloscope Traces Of Surge (top @drive, rest at the motor) 0 Voltage, ac -1000 -2000 0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 Time, microseconds 0.5 Problems VSDs may Cause • Overheating at lower speeds due to inadequate cooling • Overheating due to supply harmonics • Circulating currents in bearings due to rotor voltage build-up • Stator insulation problems due to repetitive voltage surges from voltage source PWM drives This presentation concentrates on the last issue Random Wound Stator Winding End Turn Phase Paper. Slot Liners – Ground Wall Insulation Wedges - Ground Wall Insulation Slot Separator Turn Insulation Insulation Problems in Random Wound Stators • Fast risetime of switching transient as well as possible voltage doubling caused by transmission line impedance mismatches results in high coil inter-turn voltages • For long cable lengths (>30m), surge voltage may be up to two times DC bus voltage • If regenerative braking (traction motors), overvoltage may be even higher Insulation Problems in Random Wound Stators • Short risetime voltage surges have frequencies up to 3 MHz (for 100 ns risetime) • High frequency component is blocked by inductance of the coils, and instead passes through the capacitance to ground • Result is that as much as 70% of the terminal voltage is dropped across first coil • Leads to very high turn to turn stress Magnitude (%) Voltage Drop Across Phase End Coil as a Function of Surge Risetime 80.0 70.0 60.0 50.0 40.0 30.0 20.0 10.0 0.0 0 0 10 0 0 0 20 30 40 0 0 0 0 50 60 70 80 tr (ns) 0 0 90 100 Insulation Problems in Random Wound Stators • If air pockets between turns, or between turn to ground or phase to phase, may produce partial discharge (PD) • PD is the electrical breakdown of the air in the void (occurs at 3 kV/mm in dry air at 100 kPa) • Discharges are sparks that can erode the organic insulation components in the stator insulation systems (magnet wire film, slot liner, phase paper). • Eventually PD causes stator failure PARTIAL DISCHARGES (PD) • Occur if there is an air space, the electric stress exceeds about 3 kV/mm peak (in air at 100 kPA), and there is an ‘initiatory’ electron • Air space between adjacent magnet wires Reducing Risk of Random Wound Insulation Failure By reducing Impact of surges: • Bring motor close to drive (<15 m) to avoid voltage doubling), but this makes voltage surge risetime shorter (and thus more dangerous to the turn insulation) • Increase the length of the power cable to the motor to many 100s of meters, which will lengthen the surge risetime (and decrease risk of turn failure), but still leaves risk of ground and phase insulation failure • Use surge arrestors and/or dv/dt filters to clip surge magnitude and/or lengthen surge risetime, but they are expensive Reducing Risk of Random Wound Insulation Failure By making stator more resistant to surges: • Use PD resistant magnet wire (some improvement, but normally not sufficient) • Eliminate PD up to the highest surge voltage motor is likely to see by: – better impregnation (trickle, VPI, etc) to eliminate voids – Larger conductors (reduces electric stress) – Thicker turn, ground and/or phase insulation (again to reduce electric stress) Insulation Issues with Form Wound Stators (2-13.8 kV) • Motors now operating up to 65 MW, 13.2 kV driven by voltage source PWM Converters • Usually form wound windings • Slot conductive coatings for 3.3 kV and above (since higher peak voltages) • Silicon carbide stress control at 6 kV and above MV Insulation System Anatomy Glass Protectiv e tape Stress Control tape Form-Wound Stator Coil Insulation Components a phase insulation / overhang insulation 1 phase to phase b mainwall insulation 2 phase to ground c turn insulation 3 turn to turn d corona protection shield e stress grading region Type II Insulation Stress Control System Stress Control “Traditional” Insulation Aging Mechanisms • Improper cooling • Contamination • Poor thermal conductivity • Repeated starting Thermal • Insufficient inter-coil clearance • Groundwall delamination • Contamination Electrical Possible Effects of MV Converters on Insulation Four possible aging processes: 1. Turn insulation deteriorating due to PD 2. Groundwall insulation heating 3. Groundwall insulation PD 4. PD suppression coating degradation Turn Insulation • Voltage surge risetime will be longer than for low voltage motors due to multiple stages (typically >1 ms) • Usually mica paper turn insulation which is very resistant to PD • Thus turn insulation failure much less likely than for random wound stators Mainwall Thermal Aging • Insulation dielectric heating in addition to temperature rise due to copper loss and core loss • Increased dielectric loss due to the switching frequency (currently around 2 kHz) and the harmonics from fast risetime (100’s of kHz) • loss tends to increase with frequency • In addition, for epoxy mica above 120 C, the loss increases even more since DF increases with T • Higher operating temperature may lead to faster thermal aging of groundwall or thermal runaway Mainwall PD • With power frequency, peak AC voltage is 1.4 times rms line to ground voltage • With converters, the ratio of peak AC voltage to rms voltage may be much higher • Ratio depends on the number of stages in the converter, and transmission line effects • May lead to greater PD activity – and thus faster electrical aging and ozone attack Effect on Stress Control Coatings • High switching frequency creates very high capacitive currents through the ground insulation (X = 1/(2pfC)) • capacitive currents flow through resistance of stress control coatings • May raise surface temperatures by 50 C • coatings and adjacent groundwall degrade due to oxidation • May result in extreme surface PD activity and ozone Effect on Stress Control Coatings • High frequency capacitive currents will also change the electric field distribution at the end of the stator cores • Highest electric stress at slot end, rather than end of silicon carbide coating • Stress control deterioration seems to be the biggest problem with MV motors right now Frequency Effect on Stress Control System Conducting armour Stator Core Semiconducting grading (resistance - R) Groundwall (capacitance - C) Copper Xc = 1 2pfC Thermal Maps of EW Heating Due to 60 Hz AC and PWM Inverter (Espino-Cortes, EI Magazine, Jan. 2007) Avoiding Premature Failure Some or all of the following could be used: • Use next highest voltage class (e.g. 4 kV PWM motor would use a 6.9 kV insulation system) • Class H insulation system, for higher temperature • Class H semicon coatings (since higher capacitive currents) • Three part stress control system (normal material in the slot, highly conductive coating just outside of the slot, and normal silicone carbide layer, but interleaved connection Standards to Qualify Insulation Systems for Converter Duty Motors IEC developing two standards: – IEC 60034-18-41 for Type I insulation systems (normally random wound stators), published 2007 – IEC 60034 – 18-42 for Type II motors (normally form wound stators), published 2008 – Type I stators are designed to be PD free over its entire life – Type II insulation systems are expected to withstand PD over its entire life Type I (Random Wound) Stator IEC Standard • Manufacturer must prove the motor will not have PD for the expected life of the motor • Sets PD inception voltage limits, based on severity of the surge environment • In a severe environment, 460 V rated motor must have a PDIV >2800V Type I Tests • Measure PDIV voltage on actual stators, using short risetime voltage surges • To ensure PD free over expected “life”, PDIV under short risetime surges must exceed specified limits after full thermal aging test time (IEEE 117 or IEC 60034-1821) Type II (Form Wound) Stator IEC Standard • • 1. 2. 3. Motors expected to endure PD Qualify insulation system by three separate tests: Voltage endurance test on turn insulation models Voltage endurance test on ground insulation models Voltage endurance test on stress relief coating models (must use surge voltages) • Test 1 and 2 can be done with either 50/60 Hz or surge voltages A voltage endurance test applies a higher than normal voltage and measures time to insulation failure • Off-Line PD detection with Voltage Surges • PD can occur due to short risetime, relatively high magnitude voltage pulses from converter fed drives (IFDs) • Detection of PD in presence of invertors voltage surges is a challenge – since the risetimes are similar • Desire by OEM’s to test in factory to determine PDIV for motors Surge PD Detector use with Digital Oscilloscope Display PD from Motor Stator Energized by Surge Tester IFD PD Measurements Offline • Many of the major motor manufacturers are now designing/processing insulation systems to be PD free • These OEMs use surge PD measurements to evaluate different designs and processes • At least one major OEM now does factory IFD PD test on a high percentage of production motors to prove motor suitable for use with IFDs 3.50 Maximum 3.00 Minimum PDIV (kV) 2.50 2.00 1.50 1.6 kV min 1.00 0.50 0.00 Mfr A Mfr B Mfr C Mfr D Mfr E Mfr F On-Line PD Measurement Challenges in Medium Voltage Motors Fed by VS PWM Inverters • Off-line and on-line electrical PD measurement well-established for 50/60 Hz • PD testing during short risetime voltage surges from VS-PWM inverters more challenging since surge has similar frequency content as PD, but is >1000 times larger • Need to measure PD in VHF (30-300 MHz) frequency range to separate PD from surge voltages PD Sensors • Capacitive couplers in VHF range with additional filtering – 80 pF couplers with 40 MHz lower cutoff • Further suppress drive switching voltage surges with additional high pass filters (need to be tuned for each application) • Advantage of using 80 pF sensors is that one can use the PD interpretation database established for 50/60 Hz machines AC Voltage Phase Reference • Also require a fundamental frequency voltage to synchronize PD with AC voltage • Fundamental frequency can vary from 10 Hz to 120 Hz • Due to switching noise on AC voltage, found it necessary to use a capacitive voltage divider mounted at the drive. Portable TGA-B Continuous PDTracII On-Line PD Case Study • 45 MW, 7.2 kV natural gas compressor motors • System installed in 2007 • Used one 80 pF capacitive coupler per phase PD Sensors on Motor Terminals Measured PD and Noise from Operating Variable Speed Motor at 100 Hz PRPD Plot – 45 MW, 7.2 kV Motor 12.5 MW, 3 kV Motor PD 3 .1 6 to 1 0 p p s 1 0 to 3 1 .6 p p s 3 1 .6 to 1 0 0 p p s 1 0 0 to 3 1 6 p p s 3 1 6 to 1 0 0 0 p p s > 1000 pps Su b s e t 8 M a g n itu d e 1 to 3 .1 6 p p s 750 P u ls e [m V ] B ip o l a r M a c h in e P D -2 5 0 -2 5 0 -5 0 0 -5 0 0 -7 5 0 -7 5 0 750 500 500 250 250 0 0 -225 -180 -135 -90 -45 0 P h a s e A n g l e [d e g ] 45 90 Conclusions 1. Short risetime voltage surges from voltage source PWM drives have caused premature deterioration and failure due to ozone in the stress relief coatings in service 2. Offline testing using a surge tester and special electronics can be used to qualify motor designs. 2. Practical measurements of on-line PD have been demonstrated on dozens of motors fed with VS-PWM inverters