Experimental Investigation of Steel-Borne Acoustic Pulses for Fault Pinpointing in Pipe-Type Cable Systems: A Scaled-Down Model Approach.

Sensors (Basel)

Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Baltimore, MD 21250, USA.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Pipe-type cable systems, like HPFF and gas-filled cables, are used for high-voltage underground transmission and involve insulated cables within steel pipes with pressurized fluids or gases for insulation and cooling.
  • Despite being reliable, these systems can develop faults due to insulation wear and environmental factors, making efficient fault localization critical as many circuits age beyond their 40-year design life.
  • A new approach using accelerometers on the pipes to detect fault-induced acoustic signals has been proposed, showing accurate fault pinpointing within centimeters and aligning closely with theoretical values in experiments, presenting a potential improvement for fault localization and grid reliability.

Article Abstract

Pipe-type cable systems, including high-pressure fluid-filled (HPFF) and high-pressure gas-filled cables, are widely used for underground high-voltage transmission. These systems consist of insulated conductor cables within steel pipes, filled with pressurized fluids or gases for insulation and cooling. Despite their reliability, faults can occur due to insulation degradation, thermal expansion, and environmental factors. As many circuits exceed their 40-year design life, efficient fault localization becomes crucial. Fault location involves prelocation and pinpointing. Therefore, a novel pinpointing approach for pipe-type cable systems is proposed, utilizing accelerometers mounted on a steel pipe to capture fault-induced acoustic signals and employing the time difference of arrival method to accurately pinpoint the location of the fault. The experimental investigations utilized a scaled-down HPFF pipe-type cable system setup, featuring a carbon steel pipe, high-frequency accelerometers, and both mechanical and capacitive discharge methods for generating acoustic pulses. The tests evaluated the propagation velocity, attenuation, and pinpointing accuracy with the pipe in various embedment conditions. The experimental results demonstrated accurate fault pinpointing in the centimeter range, even when the pipe was fully embedded, with the acoustic pulse velocities aligning closely with the theoretical values. These experimental investigation findings highlight the potential of this novel acoustic pinpointing technique to improve fault localization in underground systems, enhance grid reliability, and reduce outage duration. Further research is recommended to validate this approach in full-scale systems.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11548288PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s24217043DOI Listing

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