
【国外标准】 IEEE Recommended Practice for Calculating AC Short-Circuit Currents in Industrial and Commercial Power Systems
本网站 发布时间:
2025-04-28
- IEEE 551-2006
- 定价: 178元 / 折扣价: 152 元
- 在线阅读
开通会员免费在线看70000余条国内标准,赠送文本下载次数,单本最低仅合13.3元!还可享标准出版进度查询、定制跟踪推送、标准查新等超多特权!  
查看详情>>

适用范围:
Electric power systems in industrial plants and commercial and institutional buildings are designed to serve loads in a safe and reliable manner. One of the major considerations in the design of a power system is adequate control of short circuits or faults as they are commonly called. Uncontrolled short-circuits can cause service outage with accompanying production downtime and associated inconvenience, interruption of essential facilities or vital services, extensive equipment damage,… read more personnel injury or fatality, and possible fire damage. Short-circuits are caused by faults in the insulation of a circuit, and in many cases an arc ensues at the point of the fault. Such an arc may be destructive and may constitute a fire hazard. Prolonged duration of arcs, in addition to the heat released, may result in transient overvoltages that may endanger the insulation of equipment in other parts of the system. Clearly, the fault must be quickly removed from the power system, and this is the job of the circuit protective devices—the circuit breakers and fusible switches. A short-circuit current generates heat that is proportional to the square of the current magnitude, I2R. The large amount of heat generated by a short-circuit current may damage the insulation of rotating machinery and apparatus that is connected into the faulted system, including cables, transformers, switches, and circuit breakers. The most immediate danger involved in the heat generated by short-circuit currents is permanent destruction of insulation. This may be followed by actual fusion of the conducting circuit, with resultant additional arcing faults. The heat that is generated by high short-circuit currents tends not only to impair insulating materials to the point of permanent destruction, but also exerts harmful effects upon the contact members in interrupting devices. The small area common between two contact members that are in engagement depends mainly upon the hardness of the contact material and upon the amount of pressure by which they are kept in engagement. Owing to the concentration of the flow of current at the points of contact engagement, the temperatures of these points reached at the times of peak current are very high. As a result of these high spot temperatures, the material of which the contact members are made may soften. If, however, the contact material is caused to melt by excessive I2R losses, there is an imminent danger of welding the contacts together rendering it impossible to separate the contact members when the switch or circuit breaker is called upon to open the circuit. Since it requires very little time to establish thermal equilibrium at the small points of contact engagement, the temperature at these points depends more upon the peak current than upon the rms current. If the peak current is sufficient to cause the contact material to melt, resolidification may occur immediately upon decrease of the current from its peak value. Other important effects of short-circuit currents are the strong electromagnetic forces of attraction and repulsion to which the conductors are subjected when short-circuit currents are present. These forces are proportional to the square of the current and may subject any rotating machinery, transmission, and switching equipment to severe mechanical stresses and strains. The strong electromagnetic forces that high short-circuit currents exert upon equipment can cause deformation in rotational machines, transformer windings, and equipment bus bars, which may fail at a future time. read less
标准号:
IEEE 551-2006
标准名称:
IEEE Recommended Practice for Calculating AC Short-Circuit Currents in Industrial and Commercial Power Systems
英文名称:
标准状态:
-
发布日期:
-
实施日期:
出版语种:
- 推荐标准
- AS ISO/IEC 17025-2005 (R2016)/Amdt 1-2006 General requirements for the competence of testing and calibration laboratories
- AS/ACIF S003:2006 Customer Access Equipment for connection to a Telecommunications Network
- AS/NZS 1301.420s:2006 Methods of test for pulp and paper Gurley air permeance of paper (ISO 5636-5:2003 MOD)
- AS/NZS 1301.450rp:2006 Methods of test for pulp and paper Compression strength of paper and board - Short span test
- AS/NZS 1301.454s:2006 Methods of test for pulp and paper Determination of opacity (paper backing) - Diffuse reflectance method
- AS/NZS 1462.29:2006 Methods of test for plastics pipes and fittings Plastics piping and ducting systems - Determination of the long-term hydrostatic strength of thermoplastics materials in pipe form by extrapolation (ISO 9080:2003, MOD)
- AS/NZS 1605.4:2006 Methods for sampling and analysing timber preservatives and preservative-treated timber Analysis methods for determination of preservative solution concentration
- AS/NZS 1680.1:2006 Interior and workplace lighting General principles and recommendations
- AS/NZS 1698:2006/Amdt 3:2011 Protective helmets for vehicle users
- AS/NZS 1748:2006 Timber - Mechanically stress-graded for structural purposes
- AS/NZS 1826(Int):2006 Electrical equipment for explosive gas atmospheres - Special protection - Type of protection ‘s’
- AS/NZS 2032:2006/Amdt 1:2008 Installation of PVC pipe systems
- AS/NZS 2243.2:2006 Safety in laboratories Chemical aspects
- AS/NZS 2270:2006 (R2016)/Amdt 1:2007 Plywood and blockboard for interior use
- AS/NZS 2271:2004 (R2016)/Amdt 1:2006 Plywood and blockboard for exterior use