Circuit Breaker Recovery Voltages Magnitudes and Rates of Rise

This paper shows the conditions affecting the magnitude and rate of rise of recovery voltage at the terminals of an oil circuit breaker upon interruption of a short circuit, and explains their effect in quantitative terms. Factors are presented whose numerical value takes into account the number of phases involved in the short circuit and the ground connections of short circuit and generator, the decrement of short-circuit current previous to interruption, and the effect of unequal reactances in the direct and quadrature axes of synchronous machines. It is also indicated how to take into account the effect of displacement and of initial load current, and the effect of saturation is discussed very briefly. Magnetic oscillograms are presented which verify the most important of the points brought out. The most common locations and a rough idea of the magnitude of the capacitances affecting the rate of rise of recovery voltage for various types of short circuit are indicated. Calculations of the recovery voltage curve for several representative cases, at both low and high voltages, are presented, and in some cases cathode ray oscillograms are presented for comparison with the calculated curves. While no systematic data appear to be available at present regarding the effect of the rate of recovery voltage rise upon circuit breaker operation, several tests showing a very pronounced effect, some of them made by the authors and some by others, are reported briefly.

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