During the last few decades, maintenance professionals have grown to appreciate the importance of monitoring medium voltage (4 kV to 28 kV) metal enclosed bus. Despite best efforts by manufacturers in the design of bus for indoor and outdoor applications, switchgear is not immune to aging and degradation mechanisms, particularly in industrial environments. Failure investigations reveal the link to electrical tracking between phases or phase-to-ground, and across non-metallic insulating components that support the bus. The failure process involves contaminants (pollution) and moisture condensation. Accumulation of partly conductive airborne particles on the insulation surface results in the flow of capacitive currents that lead to discharges, and subsequently to the carbonization of organic components of the contaminants. Furthermore, poorly cast current transformers (CTs) and potential transformers (PTs) may have internal insulation voids. These voids result in partial discharge (PD) activity that will eventually bore a hole through the insulation and result in a failure to ground.
Traditional off-line methods of monitoring switchgear for PD activity require considerable investment (e.g. an expert to perform the measurement during scheduled outages). The techniques developed by Iris Power for motor and generator PD monitoring have now been extended to provide cost effective and reliable monitoring systems for metal clad switchgear and bus. The advantages to a maintenance department seeking to enhance reliability are as follows:
To find out what needs to be done to start monitoring PD on switchgear contact IRIS Power.