BSI PD IEC TS 61934:2024
$142.49
Electrical insulating materials and systems. Electrical measurement of partial discharges (PD) under short rise time and repetitive voltage impulses
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
BSI | 2024 | 30 |
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
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2 | undefined |
4 | CONTENTS |
6 | FOREWORD |
8 | INTRODUCTION |
9 | 1 Scope 2 Normative references 3 Terms and definitions |
11 | 4 Measurement of partial discharge pulses during repetitive, short rise-time voltage impulses and comparison with power frequency 4.1 Measurement frequency 4.2 Measurement quantities |
12 | 4.3 Test objects 4.3.1 General 4.3.2 Inductive test objects 4.3.3 Capacitive test objects 4.3.4 Distributed impedance test objects 4.4 Voltage impulse generators 4.4.1 General |
13 | 4.4.2 Voltage impulse waveforms 4.5 Effect of testing conditions 4.5.1 General Tables Table 1 – Example of parameter values of impulse voltage waveform without load |
14 | 4.5.2 Effect of environmental factors 4.5.3 Effect of testing conditions and ageing 5 PD detection methods 5.1 General 5.2 PD pulse coupling and detection devices 5.2.1 Introductory remarks |
15 | 5.2.2 Coupling capacitor with multipole filter Figures Figure 1 – Coupling capacitor with multipole filter |
16 | 5.2.3 HFCT with multipole filter Figure 2 – Example of voltage impulse and ideal PD pulse frequency spectra before and after filtering Figure 3 – HFCT between supply and test object with multipole filter |
17 | 5.2.4 Electromagnetic couplers 5.2.5 Electromagnetic UHF antennae Figure 4 – HFCT between test object and earth with multipole filter Figure 5 – Circuit using an electromagnetic coupler (e.g. an antenna) to suppress impulses from the test supply |
18 | 6 Measuring instruments 7 Sensitivity check of the PD measuring equipment and high voltage source generator 7.1 General 7.2 Test diagram for sensitivity check Figure 6 – Circuit using an electromagnetic UHF antenna |
19 | 7.3 PD detection sensitivity check 7.4 Background noise check 7.5 Detection system and HVIG noise check 7.6 Sensitivity report Figure 7 – Test diagram for sensitivity check |
20 | 8 Test procedure for increasing and decreasing the repetitive impulse voltage magnitude Figure 8 – Example of relation between the outputs of LVPG and PD detector |
21 | 9 Test report Figure 9 – Example of increasing and decreasing the impulse voltage magnitude |
22 | Annex A (informative) Voltage impulse suppression required by the coupling device Figure A.1 – Example of overlap between voltage impulseand PD pulse spectra (dotted area) Figure A.2 – Example of voltage impulse and PD pulse spectra after filtering |
23 | Figure A.3 – Example of impulse voltage damping as a function of impulse voltage magnitude and rise time |
24 | Annex B (informative) PD pulses extracted from a supply voltage impulse through filtering techniques Figure B.1 – Power supply waveform and recorded signalusing an antenna during supply voltage commutation |
25 | Figure B.2 – Signal detected by an antenna from the recordof Figure B.1, using a filtering technique (400 MHz high-pass filter) Figure B.3 – Characteristic of the filter used to pass from Figure B.1 to Figure B.2 |
26 | Annex C (informative) Results of round-robin tests of RPDIV measurement Figure C.1 – Sequence of negative voltage impulses used for RRT |
27 | Figure C.2 – PD pulses corresponding to voltage impulses Figure C.3 – Dependence of normalized RPDIV on 100 data (NRPDIV/100) on relative humidity |
28 | Annex D (informative) Examples of noise levels of practical PD detectors Table D.1 – Examples of bandwidths and noise levels for practical PD sensors |
29 | Bibliography |