National Renewable Energy Centre Chong Ng, Principal Engineer – Reliability & Validation

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National Renewable Energy Centre Chong Ng, Principal Engineer – Reliability & Validation Paul McKeever, R&D Manager OFFSHORE RENEWABLE PLANT HVDC POWER COLLECTOR AND DISTRIBUTOR EWEA 2013 February, 2013, Vienna, Austria

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EWEA 2013 February, 2013, Vienna, Austria. OFFSHORE RENEWABLE PLANT HVDC POWER COLLECTOR AND DISTRIBUTOR. National Renewable Energy Centre Chong Ng, Principal Engineer – Reliability & Validation Paul McKeever, R&D Manager. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of National Renewable Energy Centre Chong Ng, Principal Engineer – Reliability & Validation

Page 1: National Renewable Energy Centre Chong Ng, Principal Engineer – Reliability & Validation

National Renewable Energy CentreChong Ng, Principal Engineer – Reliability & Validation

Paul McKeever, R&D Manager

OFFSHORE RENEWABLE PLANT HVDC POWER COLLECTOR AND DISTRIBUTOR

EWEA 2013February, 2013, Vienna, Austria

Page 2: National Renewable Energy Centre Chong Ng, Principal Engineer – Reliability & Validation

Existing•50m blade test •Still water tank•Wave flume•Simulated seabed•Wind turbine training tower•Electrical and materials laboratories

New•3MW tidal turbine drive train - 2012•Offshore anemometry hub - 2012•100m blade test - 2012•15MW wind turbine drive train - 2013•99.9MW offshore wind demonstration site - 2013/14

Narec – Created by Government to stimulate the RE industry, A Controlled and Independent Testing Environment

Page 3: National Renewable Energy Centre Chong Ng, Principal Engineer – Reliability & Validation

Presentation Contents

• Technical Paper Background• Existing Systems

– HVAC transmission systems– HVDC systems

• Proposed HVDC System• Selected Challenges• Conclusions• Next Steps

Page 4: National Renewable Energy Centre Chong Ng, Principal Engineer – Reliability & Validation

Technical Paper Background• UK requires offshore wind to meet its renewable energy generation targets

(2020, 2030, 2050…) – UK Energy Bill … by 2020, 30% from Renewable Energy

• Likely to involve larger turbines (10MW? 20MW?) – FP6 UpWind Project

• Offshore plant would benefit from an appropriate power collection, transmission and distribution technology

– HVDC potentially provides better efficiency, particularly over longer distances– Benefits from power semiconductor and copper cost trends

Page 5: National Renewable Energy Centre Chong Ng, Principal Engineer – Reliability & Validation

HVAC Transmission Systems• Commonly used in many offshore wind farms• Can suffer from excessive reactive current

– Increases cable losses– Reduces power transfer capability– Reactive power compensation required (extra equipment)

• Can suffer from high line losses and excessive voltage drops– Extra cables required– Inter-dependant characteristics need careful consideration

• Transmission voltage level, cable capacitance and charging currents…

Page 6: National Renewable Energy Centre Chong Ng, Principal Engineer – Reliability & Validation

Existing HVDC Systems• Modern HVDC systems generally have advantages such as:

– Lower transmission losses – Fully controllable power flow – No reactive power generation or absorption (‘cable only’ connections) – Reduce/eliminate AC harmonic filter with the latest multilevel converter technologies (e.g. MMC HVDC)

• HVDC transmission systems can be categorised, by the converters used, into three categories:– Line-commutated Converters (LCC), Capacitor Commutated Converters (CCC) and Voltage Source Converters

(VSC) as illustrated below

• Point to point HVDC power transmission – Wind Farm Inter-array?

• What do we want?– A dedicated high efficiency, robust, flexible and low cost power collection, transmission and distribution

technology for use within the wind farm too

Page 7: National Renewable Energy Centre Chong Ng, Principal Engineer – Reliability & Validation

Proposed HVDC System• HVDC power transmission from the point of generation

– Reduce losses and components (i.e. make use of Turbine MV converter and availability of HVDC gird)

• Multi-terminal HVDC system – Increase availability

• Offers flexibility and redundancy

– Reduce cost• Removal of/minimise offshore substation• Reduced cable losses (HV operation)

Grid

HVDC cable MVDC

HVDC

Converter*

GridTransformer

ac

dc

MVDC

HVDC

Hybrid HVDCTransformer

Converter*

Gear G

GeneratorMVDC

HVDC

acdc

Hybrid HVDCTransformer

Converter*

Gear G

GeneratorMVDC

HVDC

acdc

Hybrid HVDCTransformer DC link

capacitor

C1

HT1

HT2

C2

T2C1

HT1

Page 8: National Renewable Energy Centre Chong Ng, Principal Engineer – Reliability & Validation

Proposed HVDC System• Hybrid HVDC Transformer (figure shows

simplified circuit):

– Steps up MVDC to HVDC

– Reduced voltage stress on primary side and current stress on secondary side allows use of “off the shelf” force commutation devices

– Uses magnetic transformer to avoid high conversion ratio

– Potential to require less power capability from switches (30%) when compared with conventional 2-level 3-phase HVDC converter

– Many potential challenges that need full investigation (e.g. switching control, network stability, economic impact, protection and isolation…)

HVDCMVDC

Number ofdevice, n = 4

HFtransformer

MV Module

HV Module

Total number of devices = 4n + 8

Page 9: National Renewable Energy Centre Chong Ng, Principal Engineer – Reliability & Validation

Proposed HVDC System• Switching device comparison:

Proposed Hybrid HVDC Transformer vs. conventional HVDC converter (3-phase 2-level topology)

– Assumptions• n = number of series connected power

switching devices in half of the bridge arm• 6.5kV rated switching devices• VSC-based HVDC converters use 3-phase, 2

(or multi) level converter topology• Assumes 2 devices in series is sufficient to

withstand the MV voltage stress

– 150kVdc example• HVDC side needs n >= 30 devices in series• For conventional VSC-based HVDC systems

– 6n >= 180 devices• For hybrid HVDC transformer

– 4n + 8 >= 128 devices– 29% saving in power semiconductors used

HVDCMVDC

Number ofdevice, n = 4

HFtransformer

MV Module

HV Module

Total number of devices = 4n + 8

Page 10: National Renewable Energy Centre Chong Ng, Principal Engineer – Reliability & Validation

Selected Challenges

• The time to implement– Dependent on development/readiness of the offshore wind industry

• Managing multi-vendor solutions– Will this be a problem?

• Practical implementation (i.e. is it realistic?)– Needs further investigation; this is still a concept

• Will the subsea power cable size increase with no centralised collector?– Shouldn’t increase for similar voltage levels; the overall power stays the same

• Would a platform still be required as a maintenance hub?– A mobile platform could be used for this purpose

• Is there an operational impact?– Turbine operation should be unaffected– System optimum operation and control needs developing

Page 11: National Renewable Energy Centre Chong Ng, Principal Engineer – Reliability & Validation

Conclusions• Potential advantages for offshore wind farm applications

– An alternative to AC and point to point HVDC transmission topologies • Suitable installation in every single power source

– Increases flexibility and redundancy of the entire HVDC system• Positive impact on wind farm availability and O&M costs

– Eliminates/minimises the need for a centralised offshore collection platform

• Potential lower component count at converter level

• Modular component sets across the system– 100MW power block in centralised system vs. 20 x 5MW power blocks in hybrid

HVDC transformer system

• Increased component count at system level (due to de-centralisation)– Balanced by no offshore substation and fewer components, e.g. fewer

power semiconductors and filters…

Page 12: National Renewable Energy Centre Chong Ng, Principal Engineer – Reliability & Validation

Next Steps• Investigate, in detail, the feasibility of this HVDC system

concept– Detailed study of the proposed hybrid HVDC transformer

• Explore the feasibility of the following advantages:– High flexibility leading to ‘independent’ turbines– Additional redundancy and high system availability (no centralised

substation)– High efficiency (power collection and O&M efficiency)– Cost reduction potential– Installation in individual turbines– Optimisation of materials (copper, semiconductor devices…)

• Investigate the use of SiC switching devices– Higher power density and heat tolerance

Page 13: National Renewable Energy Centre Chong Ng, Principal Engineer – Reliability & Validation

Thank you for listening!

Narec Contact DetailsWebsite: www.narec.co.uk

Technical Paper Authors:[email protected]

[email protected]