Overvoltages in power transformers caused by no-load switching

When an unloaded power transformer is switched on via a relatively long cable, sometimes extreme high voltages appear at the secondary side of the transformer. These overvoltages are caused by a resonant phenomenon that occurs when the resonant frequencies of the transformer and the cable match. The resonant frequency of the cable feeder is equal to the reciprocal of 4 times its travel time /spl tau/. The resonant frequency of the transformer is determined by its short-circuit inductance and the capacitance which is connected to the secondary winding. In this paper a model of this phenomenon is presented and an example of this resonant phenomenon, leading to the insulation breakdown at the secondary side of a power transformer, is given. >