CV


Abbas Saberi noghabi

Abbas Saberi noghabi

Assistant Professor

Faculty: Electrical and Computer Engineering

Department: Electrical Power Engineering

Degree: Ph.D

CV
Abbas Saberi noghabi

Assistant Professor Abbas Saberi noghabi

Faculty: Electrical and Computer Engineering - Department: Electrical Power Engineering Degree: Ph.D |

An adaptive distance protection scheme considering fault resistance, injected current, and structural changes in the power system

AuthorsAbbas Saberi noughabi,Majid Mohtashami
JournalIET Generation, Transmission and Distribution
Page number4025-4398
Serial number18
Volume number24
IF2.213
Paper TypeFull Paper
Published At2024
Journal GradeISI
Journal TypeElectronic
Journal CountryIran, Islamic Republic Of
Journal IndexISI،JCR،Scopus

Abstract

Faults in power systems occur for various reasons, such as aging or natural disasters. Detecting, locating, and promptly clearing these faults is crucial for maintaining the safety and reliability of transmission lines (TLs). Distance relays (DRs), which protect TLs, detect faults, estimate their location, and send the required commands. However, these relays may experience mis-detection due to manipulated impedance arising from both internal and external factors. These factors include measurement device errors, network topology changes, the presence of fault resistance (FR), and injected currents from remote line termi- nals. To address this challenge, an innovative adaptive protection scheme that considers FR, changes in network topology, and injected current from the opposite end of the line is pro- posed. By estimating the equivalent circuit impedances (ECIs) of the network connected to the terminal of the TL, this protection scheme utilizes impedance estimation techniques at the line terminals and offline network information. Simulation studies (tested on the IEEE 39-bus standard network) show that the proposed scheme accurately estimates fault loca- tion (FL) and FR with high precision. The simulation results demonstrate its effectiveness in improving the performance of conventional distance protection relays in both the first and second protection zones (Zone1 and Zone2 )

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