OLGGA: The OptimaL Ground Grid Application

abstract: The grounding system in a substation is used to protect personnel and equipment. When there is fault current injected into the ground, a well-designed grounding system should disperse the fault current into the ground in order to limit the touch potential and the step potential to an accep...

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Other Authors: Li, Songyan (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.38490
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-384902018-06-22T03:07:08Z OLGGA: The OptimaL Ground Grid Application abstract: The grounding system in a substation is used to protect personnel and equipment. When there is fault current injected into the ground, a well-designed grounding system should disperse the fault current into the ground in order to limit the touch potential and the step potential to an acceptable level defined by the IEEE Std 80. On the other hand, from the point of view of economy, it is desirable to design a ground grid that minimizes the cost of labor and material. To design such an optimal ground grid that meets the safety metrics and has the minimum cost, an optimal ground grid application was developed in MATLAB, the OptimaL Ground Grid Application (OLGGA). In the process of ground grid optimization, the touch potential and the step potential are introduced as nonlinear constraints in a two layer soil model whose parameters are set by the user. To obtain an accurate expression for these nonlinear constraints, the ground grid is discretized by using a ground-conductor (and ground-rod) segmentation method that breaks each conductor into reasonable-size segments. The leakage current on each segment and the ground potential rise (GPR) are calculated by solving a matrix equation involving the mutual resistance matrix. After the leakage current on each segment is obtained, the touch potential and the step potential can be calculated using the superposition principle. A genetic algorithm is used in the optimization of the ground grid and a pattern search algorithm is used to accelerate the convergence. To verify the accuracy of the application, the touch potential and the step potential calculated by the MATLAB application are compared with those calculated by the commercialized grounding system analysis software, WinIGS. The user's manual of the optimal ground grid application is also presented in this work. Dissertation/Thesis Li, Songyan (Author) Tylavsky, Daniel J. (Advisor) Ayyanar, Raja (Committee member) Vittal, Vijay (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Electrical engineering eng 142 pages Masters Thesis Electrical Engineering 2016 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.38490 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2016
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Electrical engineering
spellingShingle Electrical engineering
OLGGA: The OptimaL Ground Grid Application
description abstract: The grounding system in a substation is used to protect personnel and equipment. When there is fault current injected into the ground, a well-designed grounding system should disperse the fault current into the ground in order to limit the touch potential and the step potential to an acceptable level defined by the IEEE Std 80. On the other hand, from the point of view of economy, it is desirable to design a ground grid that minimizes the cost of labor and material. To design such an optimal ground grid that meets the safety metrics and has the minimum cost, an optimal ground grid application was developed in MATLAB, the OptimaL Ground Grid Application (OLGGA). In the process of ground grid optimization, the touch potential and the step potential are introduced as nonlinear constraints in a two layer soil model whose parameters are set by the user. To obtain an accurate expression for these nonlinear constraints, the ground grid is discretized by using a ground-conductor (and ground-rod) segmentation method that breaks each conductor into reasonable-size segments. The leakage current on each segment and the ground potential rise (GPR) are calculated by solving a matrix equation involving the mutual resistance matrix. After the leakage current on each segment is obtained, the touch potential and the step potential can be calculated using the superposition principle. A genetic algorithm is used in the optimization of the ground grid and a pattern search algorithm is used to accelerate the convergence. To verify the accuracy of the application, the touch potential and the step potential calculated by the MATLAB application are compared with those calculated by the commercialized grounding system analysis software, WinIGS. The user's manual of the optimal ground grid application is also presented in this work. === Dissertation/Thesis === Masters Thesis Electrical Engineering 2016
author2 Li, Songyan (Author)
author_facet Li, Songyan (Author)
title OLGGA: The OptimaL Ground Grid Application
title_short OLGGA: The OptimaL Ground Grid Application
title_full OLGGA: The OptimaL Ground Grid Application
title_fullStr OLGGA: The OptimaL Ground Grid Application
title_full_unstemmed OLGGA: The OptimaL Ground Grid Application
title_sort olgga: the optimal ground grid application
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.38490
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