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THE SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING REVIEW OF DOSHISHA UNIVERSITY, VOL. 55, No. 4 JANUARY 2015 Effect of Current Injection Cable on Lightning Surge Measurement for Scaled Circuit Diah PERMATA*, Yoki IKEDA*, Naoto NAGAOKA* (Received November 4, 2014) Transient characteristic of a current injection cable, which is used for a surge measurement, is investigated in this paper. Measurements are carried out in order to confirm the accuracy of a numerical simulation by means of a circuit analysis program, Electromagnetic Transients Program (EMTP). The measured results are physically explained by theoretical calculations using travelling wave theory. The characteristic impedance of the current injection cable is finally calculated. The results show that the recursive convolution line model, which is known as Semlyen’s frequency-dependent line model, can be used to represent the current injection cable. If the core is terminated by a low impedance and the sheath is open-circuited at the receiving-end, an earth-return mode is generated by a reflection at the receiving end from a coaxial mode component. .H\ZRUGVcurrent injection cable, travelling wave, coefficient of reflection, characteristic impedance measuring system composed of a voltage reference wire, ,QWURGXFWLRQ a current lead wire and a voltage probe for a vertical conductor has been reported2). However, the transient Measurement of a lightning surge voltage on characteristic of the current injection cable itself in the large-sized equipment such as a transmission tower or a scaled-down measurement has not yet been clarified. building is difficult. The lightning overvoltage has to be Finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) method investigated by a scaled-down measurement in a has been widely used to simulate the surge overvoltage laboratory. A pulse generator (PG) is widely used to on a tower. However, it is difficult to calculate the simulate the lightning current, and a coaxial cable is transient characteristic including a current injection cable commonly used to feed the current to the object. The because its cross-sectional size is far smaller than that of transient characteristic of the cable should be clearly the structure. If the cable is modeled by a thin wire understood for the investigation of the transient conductor (core) surrounded by a metallic sheath with a characteristic of the object because the cable could affect main insulator, the cell size of the FDTD analysis should the measured result. be set to small enough to express the thin materials. It The validity of the scaled-down measurement on increases the memory capacity required for the a metallic plate, which expresses earth surface, has been simulation, and also the circular cross-section of the reported for a horizontal conductor1). The paper cable cannot be accurately expressed. Furthermore, the concludes that the length of the current lead wire should data generation for the FDTD analysis becomes be longer than 10 m to avoid the effect of the internal complicate and the simulation is time consuming. A circuit of the PG on a measured result. The effect of the * Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Doshisha University, Kyoto Telephone: +81-774-65-6337, E-mail: [email protected] ( 61 ) Diah PERMATA, Yoki IKEDA, Naoto NAGAOKA 362 circuit analysis program such as Electromagnetic (case So) and the sheath both at the sending-end and the Transients Program (EMTP) is an alternative method to receiving-end are grounded (case Ss). calculate the transient characteristic. The effect of a voltage reference wire is taken into consideration in the measurement of the voltage at the receiving-end (Case II). 7UDQVLHQW&KDUDFWHULVWLFV 2.1 Measurement An experimental setup for a measurement of the V I transient characteristic of a current injection cable is PG illustrated in Fig. 1. A coaxial cable, 3D2V, is used as the current injection cable. The transient characteristic is 2.6 m I 2.9 cm V Al-plate investigated in three cable arrangements; Case I: a horizontal cable with a length of 2.6 m, and Cases II: a (a) Case I vertical inverted-L type cable of 6 m length, and Cases III: a vertical inverted-U type cable of 8 m length. The B (2.6 m) configuration of Case II is used to feed a current to a C (0.7 m) measuring object (scaled model of a tower or building). In all cases, the sheath of the current injection A (2.7 m) cable is connected to the ground at the sending-end, i.e., I the cold terminal of the PG is grounded. The core of the PG current injection cable is open- or short-circuited at the 10 m V 2.7 m V Al-plate receiving-end (Case Co or Cs) in Cases I and III. The core (b) Case II cannot be grounded in Case II. The applied voltages from the PG for the open- and short-circuited conditions are 500 V and 100 V, respectively. B (2.6 m) The transient voltage and currents are measured by a digital oscilloscope (Textronix DPO 4104, 1 GHz) C (2.7 m) A (2.7 m) with a voltage probe (Textronix P6139A, 500 MHz, 8pF I 10 MΩ) and a current probe (Textronix CT-2). A step-like voltage is supplied from a pulse generator PG (Noise Ken, PG, type INS-4040). V 2.7 m I V Al-plate 2.2 Simulation (c) Case III In this paper, the EMTP is used to calculate the Fig. 1. Three configurations of a current injection cable. transient voltage and current. The current injection cable 2.3 Measured and simulated results is modeled by a recursive convolution line model, which The measured and simulated results at the is known as Semlyen’s frequency dependent line sending-end and the receiving-end for the three model 3, 4). circuits-configurations are shown in Figs. 2 and 3. The For an investigation of the effect of the sheath measured results for Case So are represented by the bold grounding at the receiving-end of a cable, the sheath is lines and the simulated results are shown by the dashed grounded (Case Ss) or open-circuited (Case So), i.e., only lines for case So and the dashed-dotted lines for case Ss. the sheath at the sending-end of the cable is grounded ( 62 ) Effect of Current Injection Cable 800 120 700 100 80 500 Voltage [V] Voltage [V] 600 400 300 200 60 40 20 100 0 0 -100 0 50 100 Time [ns] 150 200 0 -20 (a) Sending-end core voltage 5 6 4 4 3 Current [A] Current [A] 8 2 0 0 50 100 150 200 2 1 0 -1 -4 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 Time [ns] (b) Sending-end core current (b) Sending-end core current 1000 4 800 3 Current [A] 5 Voltage [V] 0 Time [ns] 1200 600 400 200 2 1 0 0 -200 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 Time [ns] (a) Sending-end core voltage -2 363 0 50 100 150 200 -1 0 50 100 150 Time [ns] Time [ns] (c) Receiving-end core voltage (c) Receiving-end core current Cable 2.6 m Cable 6 m Cable 8 m Cable 2.6 m 200 Cable 8 m Fig. 2. Measured and simulated results core at the Fig. 3. Measured and simulated results core at the receiving-end is open circuited (case Co). receiving-end is short circuited (case Cs). The simulated results show that there is no There is no similarity between the core voltages difference in the sending-end voltage and current (Fig. 2 of the current injection cable at the receiving-end shown (a) and (b)) whether the sheath is grounded (Case Ss, in Fig. 2 (c). The receiving-end voltages oscillate due to dashed-dotted) or not grounded (Case So, dashed) if the the capacitance of the probe, which is used to measure core at the receiving-end is open-circuited (Case Co). the core voltage. The effect of the capacitance of the ( 63 ) Diah PERMATA, Yoki IKEDA, Naoto NAGAOKA 364 probe can be negated by grounding the sheath at the receiving-end (Case Co-Ss). U Zt Y0 Eb2 Zt Yo U E f 2 Eb2 Z t Y0 U 1 Z t Y0 U E f 2 (3) Fig. 2 (c) in Case III shows a travelling wave To take into account the induction between the observed before one round trip (t<2W=2l/v=16m/200m/Ps, core and the sheath of the coaxial cable, the impedances at around t=80 ns) which is not found in the other cases. of the circuit should be expressed by 2-by-2 square It is due to a reflected wave from the connecting point of matrices. The impedances connected to the cable at the sections C and B illustrated in Fig. 1. receiving-end and sending-end are assumed to be Zt and The effect of the sheath grounding at the Zp, respectively. The reflection coefficients at the receiving-end is clearly observed if the core at the sending-end and receiving-end T1 and T2 become receiving-end is short-circuited (case Cs, Fig. 3). The matrices. sending-end voltage and current (Fig. 3 (a) and 3 (b)) Zt: impedance of cable at the receiving-end. change to the opposite direction at one round trip (t=2W) depending on the sheath grounding. The amplitude of the Zt ª Rct « ¬ 0 0 º » Rst ¼ receiving-end current of Case Ss is much higher than that where Rct and Rst are core and sheath grounding of Case So at the beginning (Fig. 3 (c)). impedance, respectively. Zo: characteristic impedance of any coaxial cable in a 7KHRUHWLFDO&DOFXODWLRQ high frequency region. 3.1 Travelling wave calculation The travelling waves of the voltage and current up to one round time (2W) are analytically calculated in this section. The transient voltage and current characteristics are obtained from a circuit shown in Fig. 4. I1 V1 E f 1 Eb1 I1 Y0 E f 1 Eb1 I 2 V2 E f 2 Eb2 Y0 E f 2 Eb2 E f 1e impedance, respectively. high frequency region. Eb1e Y0 Jl Y0 E f 1e Jl Eb1eJl The reflection coefficient at the receiving-end is (1) obtained from Eq. (1). where T is reflection coefficient. The relationship between the voltage and the >T2 @ >Zt @>Y0 @ >U @ 1 >Zt @>Y0 @ >U @ the sending-end (T1) is: (2) From Eq. (2) and the travelling wave theory, the Eb2 Z t Y0 Eb2 >T @ >Z @>Y @ >U @ >Z @>Y @ >U @ 1 1 p 0 p 0 (6) The sending-end impedance is expressed by reflection coefficient can be obtained. Z t Y0 E f 2 Eb2 (5) In the same manner, the reflection coefficient at current at the receiving-end should follow the Ohm law: Eb2 E f 2 (4) where U: 2x2 identity matrix backward waves at the receiving end is defined as: Zt I 2 1 º » Zc » Zc Z s » » ZcZ s ¼ >Eb2 @ >Zt @>Y0 @ >U @ 1 >Zt @>Y0 @ >U @ >E f 2 @ The relationship between the forward and the V2 ª 1 « « Zc « 1 « ¬ Zc Hence Eq. (3) becomes: Fig. 4. Bergeron model to calculate the travelling wave. TE f Zs º » Zs ¼ Yo: characteristic admittance of any coaxial cable in a V2 Jl ªZ c Z s « ¬ Zs where Zc and ZS are coaxial and earth-return mode surge I2 V1 Eb Z0 Eq. (7) because the PG consists of a coaxial cable. Z t Y0 E f 2 E f 2 ( 64 ) Effect of Current Injection Cable Zp ªZ c Z c « c c s «¬ Z s Z sc º » Z s c »¼ 365 Zp (7) Zc = 50Ω Ef0 T1 where Zcc(=26.75 Ω) is expressed by the characteristic Zt Ef2 T2 Eb2 impedance of the RG55-U cable installed in the PG (53.5 Ω) and a termination resistor (53.5 Ω) which is Eb1 2W connected in parallel; Zcs is the impedance of the sheath. Ef1 The sending-end reflection coefficient (T1) has the following value if the sheath is short-circuited at the sending-end: T1 [Ef1]= [T1][Eb1] ª0.303 0.697º « », Z p 1 ¼ ¬ 0 ª26.75 0º « »: 0¼ ¬ 0 Fig. 5. Calculation of transient voltage and current using (8) lattice diagram. The reflection coefficient at the receiving-end (T2) The following is an example of the theoretical is expressed by the following equations according to the calculation. Case Cs-So will be calculated with the receiving-end conditions: configuration of Case I, i.e., cable length of 2.6 m. If Case Co-So: The core and the sheath are open-circuited. T2 ª1 0º « », Z t ¬0 1¼ ªf 0 º « »: ¬ 0 f¼ Zc = 50 : and Zs = 207 :, the characteristic admittance of coaxial cable Y0 and the reflection coefficient T2 (9) become: Case Co-Ss: The core is open-circuited while the sheath is Yo short-circuited. T2 ª1 2º ªf 0º « », Z t « »: ¬0 1¼ ¬ 0 0¼ ª1 0 º « », Z t ¬ 0 1¼ ª0 0º « »: ¬0 0¼ Ef0 ª66.7º « » ¬ 0 ¼ ªVc1 º « » ¬Vs1 ¼ I1 ª I c1 º « » Y0 E f 1 Eb1 ¬ I s1 ¼ E f 0 Eb1 ª 1 0º « » ¬ 1.61 1¼ ª66.7º ª0º « »« » ¬ 0 ¼ ¬0¼ ª66.7º « »V ¬ 0 ¼ ª 1.33 º « »A ¬ 1.33¼ At t = W (=2.6m/200m/Ps=13 ns): open-circuited. T2 E f1 V1 (11) Case Cs-So: The core is short-circuited while the sheath is ª 1 « 2Z s « ¬« Z c Z s ª 0.02 0.02º « », T 2 ¬ 0.02 0.025¼ At t = 0: (10) Case Cs-Ss: The core and the sheath are short-circuited. T2 [Eb2] = [T2] [Ef2] 0º » 1», Z t ¼» ª0 0 º « »: ¬0 f¼ Ef 2 (12) E f 1 t W ª 66.7 º « » ¬ 107.4¼ Eb2 T 2 E f 2 The travel of the travelling wave is illustrated in a lattice diagram shown in Fig. 5 with the reflection coefficients T1 and T2, and the diagram determines the transient voltage and current waveform. The voltage and V2 ªVc 2 º « » ¬Vs 2 ¼ I2 ª I c1 º « » Y0 E f 2 Eb 2 ¬ I s1 ¼ E f 2 Eb 2 ª 0 º « »V ¬ 107.4¼ ª0.52º « »A ¬ 0 ¼ current at the sending-end are calculated assuming that At t = 2W (=2(2.6m/200m/Ps)=26 ns): the sheath at the sending-end is connected to the ground. Eb1 Eb2 t W ª 95.1 º E f 1 T1 Eb1 « » ¬107.4¼ ( 65 ) Diah PERMATA, Yoki IKEDA, Naoto NAGAOKA 366 V1 ªVc1 º « » ¬Vs1 ¼ I1 ª I c1 º « » Y0 E f 0 E f 1 Eb1 ¬ I s1 ¼ > similar to the voltage waveform. The receiving-end of ª95.1º « »V ¬ 0 ¼ E f 0 E f 1 Eb1 @ the core of the current injection cable can be regarded as open-circuited. ª0.27º « »A ¬ 0.8 ¼ If the core is short-circuited and the sheath is open-circuited at the receiving-end (Case Cs-So), an earth The results abovementioned are based on return current is also generated. A voltage on the theoretical calculation. They were compared to the receiving-end sheath also appears in the earth-return measured and simulated results by EMTP (Fig. 3 (a) and current. The earth-return current is generated due to the 3 (b)) in the similar case as shown in Fig. 6. It shows that element T2-21 of the reflection coefficient. The transient voltage and current in the core, which are obtained from characteristic of the current injection cable terminated by theoretical calculation, agree with the simulated and a resistor of small resistance can be roughly explained by measured results. the result of case Cs (the core is short-circuited). 3.2 Surge impedance 100 Measured Simulated 90 80 70 Voltage [V] Surge impedance or characteristic impedance is Theoretical one of properties of a distributed parameter circuit such 60 as cable. It is defined as a ratio between a voltage and a 50 current of a travelling wave propagating along a line. The 40 30 estimated surge impedance of the current injection cable 20 10 can be obtained from a measured and a simulated result 0 0 10 W 20 2W 30 40 using the Eq. (13)2): 50 Time [ns] Z0 (a) Sending-end core voltage 2 and tp is the time to peak voltage, which is less than the Theoretical 1.4 Current [A] voltage, I(tp) is the current at the time of the peak voltage Simulated 1.6 (13) where Z0 is the estimated surge impedance, Vp is the peak Measured 1.8 Vp I t p round-trip time (2W) of a travelling wave. 1.2 1 Table 1 shows the calculated results of the surge 0.8 impedance Z0 based on the measured and simulated 0.6 0.4 results. The difference between the measured- and 0.2 0 0 10 20 Time [ns] 30 40 simulated-surge impedance is less than 6 %. 50 Table 1. Surge impedance of the current injection cable. (b) Sending-end core current Fig. 6. Theoretical, measured and simulated results at sending-end in case Cs-So with configuration Case I. If the receiving-end core is open circuited (Cases I Co-So, Co-Ss) or both the core and sheath are short-circuited (Case Cs-Ss), the coaxial current of the II cable is generated. The current flows into the core and returns from the sheath. From a practical point of view, III the cable is terminated by a higher impedance than the characteristic impedance of the cable to inject a current ( 66 ) Z0 [Ω] Measurement Simulation Difference (%) Co-So 54.5 51.5 5.7 Cs-So 54.2 51.5 5.1 Co-So 54.9 51.9 5.6 Co-So 55 52.4 4.8 Cs-So 53.4 52.4 1.9 Case Effect of Current Injection Cable 3.3 Sheath Surge impedance The The theoretical sheath surge impedance is defined by Eq. (14). Zs 60ln 2h rS 367 analytical calculation shows if the receiving-end core is open-circuited or both the core and sheath are short-circuited, the reflection can be explained (14) only by the coaxial mode. If the core is short-circuited Where h and rs are height and outer radius of the metallic and the sheath is open-circuited at the receiving-end, an sheath (1.85 mm), respectively. earth return current is also generated. A voltage on the The sheath surge impedance is determined by the sheath appears in the earth return mode. The current height of the current injection cable. When the cable is generation can be explained by the reflection coefficient placed on the floor (h|5mm), the measured and at the receiving end. The measured results of the surge theoretical sheath surge impedance are 130 Ω and 100 Ω, respectively. As aforementioned, in case the sending end sheath is open-circuited (Cs-So), the earth return current is generated due to the element T2-21 of the reflection impedance agree with the simulated ones. The accuracy of the Semlyen line model of EMTP was confirmed by comparing with the measured results. The line model is suitable for a numerical simulation including a current injection cable. coefficient. The theoretical calculation in the previous 5HIHUHQFHV section clearly shows the receiving-end sheath voltage Vs2 is generated due to this element. The element T2-21 is a function of sheath surge impedance and coaxial surge 1) Okabe, “On the Equivalence of a Conducting Plate in a impedance. Therefore, in case the sending-end sheath is Laboratory Experiment to a Real Earth”, IEEE Trans. Electromagn. Compat., 52[3],691-698 (2010). open-circuited, the sheath surge impedance should not be 2) ignored. A. Ametani, M. Nishitsuji, N. Nagaoka, Y. Baba and S. P. Yuttagowith, A. Ametani, N. Nagaoka, and Y. Baba, “ Influence of a Measuring System to a Transient Voltage on a Vertical Conductor”, IEEJ Trans. Electrical and Electronic Engineering, 5, 221-228 (2010). &RQFOXVLRQ 3) Workshop on Advanced Technologies for Power System Transient characteristics of the current injection cable were measured, simulated and analytically N. Nagaoka, “Cable Transient,” Proc. of International Simulations, 116-134 (2011). 4) D. V. Dommelen and H. W. Dommel, ATP Rule Book, (LEC., Belgium, 1987), p. 614-630. calculated in this paper. ( 67 )