An intelligent boundary switch is a three-phase outdoor power distribution device equipped with a controller. It is installed at the boundary point on the medium voltage overhead distribution lines. It can automatically remove the single-phase-to-ground fault and isolation phase-to-phase short-circuit fault. Firstly, the structure of an intelligent boundary switch is studied, and then the fault detection principle is also investigated. The single-phase-to-ground fault and phase-to-phase short-circuit fault are studied respectively. A method using overcurrent to judge the short-circuit fault is presented. The characteristics of the single-phase-to-ground fault on an ungrounded distribution system and compositional grounded distribution system are analyzed. Based on these characteristics, a method using zero sequence current to detect the single-phase-to-ground fault is proposed. The research results of this paper give a reference for the specification and use of intelligent boundary switches.
Both the growing number of dispersed generation plants and storage systems
and the new roles and functions on the demand side (e.g. demand side management) are
making the operation (monitoring and control) of electrical grids more complex, especially
in distribution. This paper demonstrates how to integrate phasor measurements so that
state estimation in a distribution grid profits optimally from the high accuracy of PMUs.
Different measurement configurations consisting of conventional and synchronous mea-
surement units, each with different fault tolerances for the quality of the calculated system
state achieved, are analyzed and compared. Weighted least squares (WLS) algorithms for
conventional, linear and hybrid state estimation provide the mathematical method used in
this paper. A case study of an 18-bus test grid with real measured PMU data from a 110 kV
distribution grid demonstrates the improving of the system’s state variable’s quality by
using synchrophasors. The increased requirements, which are the prerequisite for the use
of PMUs in the distribution grid, are identified by extensively analyzing the inaccuracy of
measurement and subsequently employed to weight the measured quantities.
The grid-tied inverter synchronizes with the network on the basis of the instantaneous voltage phase angle. This angle is computed by the so-called synchronization algorithms. During grid disturbances, it is estimated with a certain accuracy, which varies for different disturbances and depends on the choice of algorithm. The tests presented here determine how to make an optimal selection of the synchronization algorithm. The research methods used are modeling, simulation and analysis of the results obtained. One of the most important outcomes is the determination of the root-mean-square sync error and its dynamics denotation. The research conclusions should be of particular interest to designers of distributed energy systems with a large number of inverter energy sources.