IEEE C37.91-2021
$92.63
IEEE Guide for Protecting Power Transformers
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
IEEE | 2021 |
Revision Standard – Active. Guidelines for protecting three-phase power transformers of more than 5 MVA rated capacity and operating at voltages exceeding 10 kV is provided to protection engineers and other readers in this guide. In some cases, a user may apply the techniques described in this guide for protecting transformers of less than 5 MVA ratings or operating at voltages less than 10 kV. Information to assist protection engineers in properly applying relays and other devices to protect transformers used in transmission and distribution systems is also provided. General philosophy, practical applications, and economic considerations involved in power transformer protection are discussed, with an emphasis on practical applications. Types of faults in transformers are described. Technical problems with the protection systems, including the behavior of current transformers during system faults, are discussed, as well as associated problems, such as fault clearing and post trip reenergization.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
---|---|
1 | IEEE Std C37.91 Front cover |
2 | Title page |
4 | Important Notices and Disclaimers Concerning IEEE Standards Documents |
8 | Participants |
10 | Introduction |
11 | Contents |
13 | 1. Overview 1.1 General 1.2 Scope 1.3 Word usage |
14 | 1.4 Purpose 1.5 Device numbers 2. Normative references |
15 | 3. Definitions, acronyms, and abbreviations 3.1 Definitions |
16 | 3.2 Acronyms and abbreviations 4. Philosophy and economic considerations |
17 | 5. Types of failures in transformers |
18 | 6. Relay currents 6.1 General |
19 | 6.2 Minimum internal faults 6.3 Maximum internal faults 6.4 Performance of CTs |
21 | 6.5 Reasons for mismatch |
23 | 7. Electrical detection of faults 7.1 General |
24 | 7.2 Fuse protection and self-powered resettable fault interrupters |
26 | 7.3 Differential protection |
47 | 7.4 Overcurrent relay protection |
49 | 7.5 Ground-fault protection |
55 | 7.6 Fault detection for special-purpose transformers |
65 | 7.7 Backup and external fault protection |
68 | 7.8 Temperature relays 7.9 Miscellaneous relays 8. Mechanical detection of faults 8.1 General 8.2 Gas accumulator relay 8.3 Gas detector relay |
69 | 8.4 Pressure relays |
72 | 9. Thermal detection of abnormalities 9.1 General 9.2 Winding hot-spot measurement thermal relays |
73 | 9.3 Calculated thermal model relays 9.4 Top-insulating liquid temperature protection |
74 | 9.5 Fuses or overcurrent relays 9.6 Thermal relays for tank temperature 9.7 Overexcitation protection |
76 | 10. Fault clearing 10.1 General |
77 | 10.2 Relay tripping circuits 10.3 Circuit breakers 10.4 Tripping of remote circuit breakers |
79 | 10.5 Circuit switcher |
80 | 10.6 Fuses 10.7 Self-powered resettable fault interrupters 11. Post-trip analysis prior to re-energizing |
81 | 12. Gas analysis 13. Special protective schemes 13.1 General |
82 | 13.2 Grounding transformer inside the main transformer differential zone |
85 | 13.3 Unbalanced voltage protection for wye-connected, three-legged core-type transformers |
86 | 13.4 Differential protection of single-phase transformers connected in three-phase banks |
90 | 14. Other considerations |
91 | Annex A (informative) Application of the transformer through-fault-current duration guide to the protection of power transformers |
112 | Annex B (normative) Examples of setting transformer protection relays B.1 General B.2 Relays for protecting a step-up transformer |
119 | B.3 Setting relays for a network autotransformer |
125 | B.4 Relay settings for a transformer supplying energy to distribution systems |
129 | B.5 Calculating slope for use in a transformer differential relay |
132 | Annex C (informative) Thermal overload protection C.1 General theory |
133 | C.2 Winding temperature monitoring on transformer with on-load-tap changer C.3 Limitations of traditional winding temperature indicator |
137 | C.4 Protection |
138 | C.5 Microprocessor-based relays for transformer thermal winding protection |
139 | C.6 Methods for calculating winding temperature |
141 | Annex D (informative) Phase shift and zero-sequence compensation in differential relays D.1 General D.2 Example |
142 | D.3 Reasons for using internal compensation |
143 | D.4 Differential current compensation connections |
147 | D.5 Examples |
151 | Annex E (informative) Bibliography |
160 | Back cover |