Kallikuppa Sreenivasa
In my two previous blog posts on improving data acquisition (DAQ) for grid protection and control, I discussed the need for interfacing multiple analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) to a single processor and using the programmable real-time unit subsystem and industrial communication subsystem (PRU-ICSS) to improve sensor DAQ performance. In this post, I will discuss the DAQ accuracy requirements for voltage, current and active energy used in grid applications and discuss our High Accuracy ±0.5% Current and Isolated Voltage Measurement Reference Design Using 24-Bit Delta-Sigma ADC, which is based on the ADS131A04 24-bit delta-sigma ADC.
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DAQ is used for protection of grid assets and measurement of electrical parameters for metering/monitoring. Measuring a wide range of voltage and current inputs (covering protection and measurement-range) within a specified accuracy limit using a single hardware configuration is a key requirement.
To protect grid primary equipment, the DAQ (secondary equipment) must measure voltage and current inputs accurately over a wide input range in order to provide repeatable fault detection and trip-time performance. For protection, an accuracy class specifies the voltage (3P) and current (5P, 10P) range, depending on the grid primary equipment. For measurement, the current range is 5% of the rated current In to the maximum current, which is four times In (1 A or 5 A); the voltage range is specified from 80%-120% of the rated voltage Vn. A DAQ used in grid applications additionally provides energy measurement functions with an accuracy class 1 or better for a limited range. An analog front end (AFE), which measures a wide range of inputs accurately meeting both protection and measurement class accuracy requirements, simplifies DAQ design.
The AFE shown in Figure 1 includes a sensor interface, gain scaling to the ADC range, input transient protection, analog-to-digital conversion and a host interface.
A current transformer (CT) transforms primary current to a proportional secondary current and a potential transformer (PT) transforms primary voltage to a proportional secondary voltage. The measurement range and accuracy requirements for current, voltage and active energy varies with specified accuracy class and the below section provides more details
CTs are used to protect equipment against overload, short-circuit and unbalance. The accuracy of protection-class CTs is low, but still high enough to sense fault currents. In protection-class CTs, the error is specified at 100% of In. Protection class CTs are specified as 5P20, meaning that at 20 times In (accuracy limit factor) the error must be <±5%. Standard accuracy-limit factors are 5, 10, 20 and 30 and P indicates protection class. Measurement class CTs has higher accuracy requirements with a limited range.
More grid equipment now uses non-conventional instrument transformers including an electronic current transformer (ECT). ECTs are characterized by small volume, light weight, increased isolation, good linearity and easy digitization. ECT specifies a special class of accuracy limits called transient protection electronic (TPE) class. Class TPE is defined by a maximum peak instantaneous error of 10% at the accuracy-limit condition. A Class 5 TPE ECT meets the requirements for protection applications and fault transient recording. Table 1 lists the accuracy requirements for measurement and protection class.
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*The rated accuracy limit primary current is the value of the primary current up to which the protection-class CT complies with composite error accuracy requirements.
**The peak instantaneous error assesses the error of transient DC and AC components.
PTs are used for protection equipment against voltage failure/unbalance. PTs transform the primary voltage to a rated voltage Vn of 110 V/240 V on the secondary side. The primary voltage depends on the application. Table 2 lists the accuracy requirements for measurement and protection class.
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In addition to measuring voltage and current within the specified accuracy range, DAQ in grid applications also measures power and energy for implementing specialized protections and monitoring. Table 3 lists the accuracy requirements.
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Our reference design for current and isolated voltage measurement shows how to measure voltage, current and energy with high accuracy over a wide input range and has the functional blocks as shown in Figure 2.
The key functions of the AFE are:
In the reference design, two ADCs are chained and a common clock with clock buffer is used to synchronize all channels. Chaining of two ADCs together expanded the input channel to 8 with a synchronization delay of 5-µs or less between channels.
I tested the design performance using a CT/Rogowski coil with a fixed-gain amplifier for current measurement and potential divider with a fixed-gain amplifier/isolation amplifier for voltage measurements. The measurement accuracy is within ±0.5% for different integration periods ranging from 100ms to 1000ms. The dynamic range performance for current inputs was >500 to 1 (the ratio between maximum and minimum current measured), which meets both measurement and protection class accuracy requirements with standard accuracy limit factors ≥30. The AFE can be used with a low-power CT with a 0.6-mV to 333-mV input per International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) 60044-8.
In my next post, my colleague Akshay Mehta and I will discuss power architecture options for improving DAQ performance.
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