Bulk
oil circuit breakers are enclosed in metal-grounded weatherproof tanks
that are referred to as dead tanks. The tank type circuit breakers had 3
separate tanks for 72.5 KV and above (Fig. 12a). For 36 KV and below,
single tank construction, phase barriers were provided between phase.
The
contact separation takes place in steel tanks filled with oil. The gases
formed, due to the heat of the arc, expand and set the turbulent flow
in the oil. The arc was drawn directly inside of the container tank
without any additional arc extinguishing but the one provided by the gas
bubble surrounding the arc. Plain break breakers were superseded by arc
controlled oil breakers.
To assist arc extinction process, arc control devices were fitted to
the contact assembly. These were semi-enclosed chamber of dielectric
materials.The purpose of the arc control devices is to improve operating
capacity, speed up the extinction of arc, and decrease pressure on the
tank. The performance of oil circuit breaker depended on the
effectiveness of the arc control devices.
The breakers incorporate arc control are called arc control circuit breakers.( a ) 115 KV circuit breaker |
( b) 66 KV circuit breaker |
Figure 12 Types of bulk oil circuit breaker
These are two types of such breakers:
- Self blast oil circuit breakers - in which arc control is provided by internal means i.e. are itself facilitates its own extinction efficiency.
- Forced blast oil circuit breakers - in which arc control is provided by mechanical means external to the circuit breaker.
Self blast oil circuit breaker
- in this type of breakers, the gases produced during arching are
confined to a small volume by the use of an insulating rigid pressure
chamber or explosion pot surrounding the contacts. The space available
for the arc gases is restricted by the chamber so a very high pressure
is developed to force the oil and gas through or around the arc to
extinguish it. The magnitude of the pressure depends upon the value of
fault current to be interrupted. The arc itself generates the pressure
so such breakers are also called self generated pressure oil circuit
breakers.
The pressure
chamber is relatively cheap and gives reduced final arc extinction gap
length and arcing time as against the plain oil breaker. Different types
of explosion pots are described below:
. Plain explosion pot -
It is a rigid cylinder of insulating material and encloses the fixed
and moving contacts as shown in Fig. 13. The moving contact is a
cylindrical rod passing through a restricted opening called throat at
the bottom. When fault occurs the contacts get separated and arc is
struck between them. The heat of the arc decomposes oil into a gas at
very high pressure in the pot. This high pressure forces the oil and gas
through and around the arc to extinguish it.
If the arc extinction will not take place when the moving contact is
still within the pot, it occurs immediately after the moving contact
leaves the pot. It is because, emergence of moving contact will be
followed by violent rush of gas and oil through the throat production
rapid extinction.
Limitation of this type of pot is that it cannot be used for very low
or very high fault currents. With low fault currents the pressure
developed is small, thereby increasing the arcing time. And with high
fault currents, the gas is produced so rapidly that the plot may burst
due to high pressure. So this pot is used on moderate short circuit
currents only when rate of gas evolution is moderate.
. Cross jet explosion pot
- Figure 14 shows the cross jet pot which is made of insulating
material and has channels on one side that acts as arc splitters. The
arc splitter help in increasing the arc length, thus facilitating arc
extinction. when fault occurs, the moving contact of the circuit breaker
begins to separate and arc is struck in the top of the pot. The gas
generated by the arc exerts pressure on the oil in the back passage.
When the moving contact uncovers the arc splitter ducts, fresh oil is
forced across the arc path. The arc is therefore driven sideways into
the arc splitters, which increase the arc length, causing arc
extinction.
The cross jet explosion pot is used for interrupting heavy fault
currents. For low fault currents the gas pressure is small and
consequently the pot does not give a satisfactory operation.
Figure 14 Principle of cross jet explosion pot |
. Self compensated explosion pot -
This pot is a combination of plain explosion pot and cross jet
explosion pot. So it can interrupt low as well as heavy short circuit
currents. Figure 15 shows the itself compensated explosion pot.
Figure 15 self compensated explosion pot |
Forced Blast Oil Circuit Breaker
In this type of circuit breaker
there is a piston attached to a moving contact. When fault occurs the
moving contact moves and hence the piston associated with it also moves
producing pressure inside the oil chamber. So the oil gets movement or
turbulates and quenching the arc.
The arc control devices can be classified into two groups: cross-blast and axial blast interrupters (Fig. 16).
Figure contents:
1. Fixed contact assembly 2. Arc 3. Moving contact with tungsten-copper tip 4. Fiber reinforced tube
Figure 16 Classification of arc control devices |
1. Fixed contact assembly 2. Arc 3. Moving contact with tungsten-copper tip 4. Fiber reinforced tube
5. Gas evolved by decomposition of oil 6. Dielectric oil
7. Outer enclosure (Porcelain or Fiber Reinforced Epoxy )
In cross blast
interrupters, the arc is drawn in front several lateral vents. The gas
formed by the arc causes high pressure inside the arc control device.
The arc is forced into the lateral vents in the pot, which increases the
length of the arc and shortens the interruption time. The axial blast
interrupters use similar principle as the cross blast interrupters.
However, the axial design has a better dispersion of the gas from the
interrupter.
Figure 17
illustrates a typical 69 KV breaker of 2500 MVA breaking capacity. All
three phases are installed in the same tank. The tank is made of steel
and is grounded. This type of breaker arrangement is called the dead
tank construction. The moving contact of each phase of the circuit
breaker is mounted on a lift rod of insulating material. There are two
breaks per phase during the breaker opening. The arc control pots are
fitted over the fixed contacts. Resistors parallel to the breaker
contacts may be installed alongside the arc control pots. It is
customary and convenient for this type of breakers to mount current
transformers in the breaker bushings.
Figure 17 dead tank oil circuit breaker |
Figure contents :
1 bushing 6 plunger guide
2 oil level indicator 7 arc control device
3 vent 8 resistor
4 current transformer 9 plunger bar
5 dashpot
The practical limit for the bulk oil breakers is 275 KV. Figure 18 shows 220 KV one phase dead tank circuit breaker.
Figure 18 Single phase tank oil circuit breaker |
Figure content ;
1 bushing 7 arc control unit
2 oil level indicator 8 parallel contact
3 vent 9 resistor
4 linear linkage 10 plunger bar
5 dashpot 11 impulse cushion
6 guide block
The oil circuit
breakers are usually installed on concrete foundations at the ground
level. During interruption of heavy fault currents the breakers tend to
move. To minimize the damage to the breakers, breakers with very high
interrupting capacity have an impulse cushion is provided at the bottom
of the breakers. The cushion filled with an inert gas, for example
nitrogen.
Figure 19 illustrates the tank type oil circuit breaker, in open position, with the arc is not yet extinguishedFigure 19 Schematic diagram of bulk oil circuit breaker |
The major disadvantages of tank type circuit breakers are ;
- Large quantity of oil is necessary in oil circuit breakers though only a small quantity is necessary for arc extinction.
- The entire oil in the tank is likely to get deteriorated due to sludge formation in proximity of the arc. Then the entire oil needs replacement.
- The tanks are too big, at 36 KV and above, and the tank type oil circuit breaker loses its simplicity,
The above causes led to
the development of minimum oil circuit breakers. As the name itself
signifies, the minimum oil circuit breaker requires less oil. The arc
extinction medium is dielectric oil, the same as that used in tank type
circuit breakers. There is no steel tank but the arc extinction takes
place in a porcelain containers.