Bus ct configuration, Direction of power flow – Basler Electric BE1-11g User Manual

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Bus CT Configuration

On protection systems equipped with two sets of CTs, the power element can monitor CT circuit 1 or CT
circuit 2. The CT source is selected on the Sensing Transformers settings screen in BESTCOMSPlus.

Direction of Power Flow

In addition to exceeding the power pickup threshold, direction of power flow (forward or reverse) must
match the directional setting for the 32 element to operate. In the BE1-11g, the forward and reverse
directions are defined by the polarity voltage and current connections to the BE1-11g as shown in Figure
76.
Based on IEEE polarity convention, forward power is defined as bus to line and reverse power is
defined as line to bus.

Figure 76. Direction of Power Flow Defined by the Polarity of Voltage and Current Connections

Establishing Forward and Reverse Pickup Values

Three-phase power pickup settings for the power elements are always positive regardless of the
directional setting. However, it is useful in understanding the element response to visualize the forward
direction as positive power and the reverse direction as negative power. If we think in terms of a forward
and reverse scale with zero (0) in the middle as shown in Figure 77, positive and negative power flows
relative to the forward and reverse directional setting. For example, assume an intertie application where
the Area EPS (electric utility) requires the Local EPS (source of non-utility generation) to separate from
the Area EPS (trip the intertie breaker) if any power flows towards the Area EPS. For illustrative purposes,
assume that the BUS in Figure 76 is the Local EPS, 52 is the intertie breaker, and LINE is the Area EPS.
Normal power flow is from the Area EPS to the Local EPS, which happens to be an industrial facility with
local generation used for peak shaving.

Figure 77. Forward and Reverse Pickup Values

Power (32) Protection

BE1-11g

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