1. Introduction
Ice covering on overhead transmission lines is a serious threat to the safe operation of power grids. Overweight ice would break wires or collapse towers, and then cause disruption of power transmission and large-scale outage [
1,
2]. The ice storms in North America 1998 [
3], Germany 2005 [
4], and China 2008 [
5] are good examples of such consequences. In order to protect the grid from ice disaster, dozens of anti-icing or de-icing methods have been proposed [
1,
3,
5,
6], such as thermal de-icing, mechanical de-icing, passive icephobic coatings, etc.
Among various de-icing methods, heating of ice-covered line conductors by electrical current is recognized as the most efficient engineering approach to minimize the catastrophic consequences of ice events [
5,
6,
7,
8] because it can eliminate the ice covered on hundreds of kilometers of line within an hour, without damaging the grid structure or polluting the environment. Both alternating-current (AC) and direct-current (DC) can be used to melt ice, but AC ice-melting is usually used for transmission lines up to 110 kV, while DC ice-melting is more recommended for high voltage lines up to 500 kV [
3,
4]. In a DC de-icing system, the most critical part is the DC de-icer (DDI), which generates the required DC voltage and current.
Nowadays, the most widely adopted de-icer is the thyristor-based line-commutated converter (LCC) [
9,
10,
11], derived from the conventional high voltage direct current transmission (HVDC) technology. It can output a wide range of DC voltages by regulating the thyristor phase shift angle to meet the de-icing requirement of various lines; moreover, it can operate as a static var compensator (SVC) when there is no de-icing requirement. Thus, it has been widely used in Russia, Canada, China [
5,
12,
13], etc. However, due to the inherent characteristics of thyristors, LCCabsorbs much reactive power and generate a lot of harmonics. Thus, it has to deploy an extra series of harmonic filters and many shunt capacitors to meet the grid requirements. Thus, it is bulky, inflexible, and costly. In order to overcome these shortcomings, some proposed constructing the DC de-icer using a voltage source converter (VSC). In [
14], a multiple phase shift de-icer was proposed, but it needs a complex multi-winding transformer. In [
15], a concept of DC de-icer constructing with a static synchronous compensator (STATCOM) was proposed, but it didn’t give specific solutions. In [
16], a 3-level STATCOM scheme was proposed for the de-icer application. It presents excellent harmonic and reactive power features, but it requires high-power 3-level converters up to 100 MVA, and such a high-power 3-level converter is difficult to manufacture. Moreover, its DC voltage has to exceed its AC voltage, thus it has a limited DC voltage range.
In the last few decades, modular multilevel converter (MMC) topology has been rapidly developed [
17,
18]. Since it was presented for the first time by Lesnicar and Marquardt in 2003 [
19], it has been widely used in many high-voltage and medium-voltage applications [
20,
21,
22]. It can output a smooth and nearly ideal sinusoidal voltage with little filters, and it has modularity and scalability, and is facile and flexible. The main application of MMC is VSC-based HVDC transmission [
22,
23]. In the last five years, dozens of large-capacity MMC-based HVDC systems have been built [
22], their rated DC voltage is up to ±500 kV and their rated power is hundreds of MW or even 2000 MW. Another typical application of MMC is the STATCOM [
24]. In recent years, most of the STATCOM above 10 Mvar have adopted the MMC structure.
For the de-icer application, an MMC-based DC de-icer (MMC-DDI) with full-bridge submodules (SM) was firstly presented in 2013 [
25]. Its structure is similar to a pair of parallel star-configured static var generators (SVGs), and their neutral points are respectively led out as the DC positive and negative poles of DC de-icer. It inherits all the advantages of MMC topology. Moreover, since it employs the full-bridge SMs, it can provide both the buck and boost functions for the DC-link voltage [
26]. Thus, it has a wide DC output voltage range to satisfy the de-icing requirements of different lines. In addition, it can be operated as SVG to provide reactive power compensation for the grid. Due to these advantages, the MMC-DDI is recognized as a promising de-icing solution [
27]. Since MMC-DDI was first proposed in 2013 [
25], its operation principle and control optimization have been further studied in [
27,
28,
29]. In [
28], the hardware selection of MMC-DDI was studied, and a quantitative comparison with an LCC-based de-icer was given. As is shown, both the electrical characteristics and the land occupation have more advantages. In [
29], the control and modulation algorithms of MMC-DDI are described. In [
27], the dynamic model of MMC-DDI and its harmonic features under phase-shifted carrier modulation are analyzed, and then a detailed control scheme is developed, and the MMC-DDI topology was experimentally verified by utilizing a downscaled prototype. The literature above mainly focus on the technical feasibility of MMC-DDI and pay little attention to its economy optimization.
Like most STATCOMs, the existing MMC-DDI is recommended to be directly connected to the substation distribution network without a transformer. This is considered as a major advantage of the MMC-DDI scheme because the absence of transformer is believed to make the whole device small, light, and compact. Under this configuration, the arm voltage and current of MMC are substantially determined by the grid-connected voltage in addition to the required DC melting voltage and current. For the common high-voltage transmission lines up to 500 kV, their DC melting current is 4000–5000 A or even higher, while their DC melting voltage is usually no more than 10 kV. When the distribution network voltage is unsuitable—for example, 35 kV for most 500 kV substations—the MMC in this configuration simultaneously withstands higher arm voltage and larger arm current. Thus, the converter rating of MMC-DDI far exceeds its output ice-melting power, resulting in a poor economy to engineering apply.
To address this issue, this paper presents a quantitative analysis on the converter characteristics of MMC-DDI, and then calculates the required converter rating and its influencing factors. It reveals that, for a certain DC de-icing requirement, converter rating varies greatly with its AC-side voltage, and then an optimized design method is proposed to improve the economy of MMC-DDI. Finally, a design example and its corresponding simulation results are given. As this case shows, under the same de-icing outputting characteristics, the optimized converter rating is reduced from 151 MVA to 68 MVA, and the total cost of MMC-DDI system is reduced by 48%.
4. The Proposed Optimization Design Method
4.1. General Design Process of IMD
For any type of DC ice melting device, its design process generally follows these steps:
Step 1: According to the line parameters and meteorological conditions of the transmission lines to be melted, calculate the required DC-side output de-icing current, voltage and power, and then determine the rated DC-side output parameters of IMD.
For a given transmission line, its required de-icing current depends on many parameters, such as conductor type, ambient temperature, wind velocity, ice thickness and de-icing duration, etc. The thermal behavior of overhead conductors has been well studied, and some formulas are given to calculate the de-icing current in many standards—for example, IEEE standard [
30] and CIGRE standard [
31]. Generally, the de-icing current should be greater than the minimum de-icing current and no more than the maximum endure current of the line conductor. For some typical conductor types used in China, the minimum de-icing current and the maximum endure current are shown as
Table A1 (see
Appendix A). In actual ice melting system, it generally tries to choose the intermediate value of the maximum and minimum values as the rated de-icing current.
After determining the de-icing current, the required de-icing DC voltage can be calculated as
where
Iicing is the required de-icing current and
Rline is the phase resistance of transmission line.
kicing corresponds to the ice-melting mode,
kicing = 2 when the de-icing current is passed down one phase conductor and back along another, and
kicing = 1.5 when down one and back along the other two [
16].
When there are several lines to be melted, the de-icing DC current and voltage of each line can be calculated one by one, and then the rated DC-side output parameters of the IMD are determined by the output DC voltage range, the maximum de-icing current, and the maximum de-icing power.
Step 2: According to the optional voltage levels of the power substation as well as the rated IMD output power, select the proper access voltage of the IMD.
For typical transmission lines, their DC ice-melting power is generally among several MW and hundreds of MW. Within this range, the IMD is usually connected to the low-voltage distribution network of the substation, generally 10 kV or 35 kV in China.
Step 3: According to the DC-side output parameter requirements and the grid access voltage, design the internal structure and parameters of the IMD.
In the process of designing the internal IMD parameters, it is usually necessary to consider both the technical feasibility and the economy.
4.2. The Proposed Circuit Configuration and Its Economic Analysis
According to the above calculation, for a certain ice-melting requirement, the converter rating of MMC-DDI varies greatly with its AC-side voltage. Traditionally, MMC-DDI is directly connected to the grid, thus its AC-side input voltage always equals the grid voltage. This may correspond to a very high converter rating, resulting in poor economy. To solve such a problem, this paper proposes an optimization MMC-DDI configuration structure as shown in
Figure 4, i.e., a transformer should be inserted between the grid and the converter under certain conditions. In order to realize this idea, there are two main questions:
- (A)
When should the transformer be desired and when is it undesired?
- (B)
If a transformer is inserted, what are the specifications and parameters of the transformer?
According to (11), when the power factor is controlled as cos
ϕ = 1, the AC-side input apparent power of MMC-DDI always equals its DC side output power regardless of the AC-side voltage. Therefore, if a transformer is inserted, its rating only needs to equal the output de-icing power rather than the converter rating. In order to get the minimum converter rating as shown in (18), the output phase voltage of the transformer can be set as
Um = 0.5
Udc, corresponding to a line voltage
. In summary, the specification of the transformer can be determined as
where
STran is the transformer rating, and
Tr is the transformer rating voltage radio.
In order to get the timing of transformer insertion, the cost of converter and transformer should be compared. Since the MMC-DDI is rarely applied, it is difficult to obtain its market cost; here, its cost is estimated by referring to that of SVGs. This is due to three reasons: (1) MMC-DDI is structurally equivalent to a pair of star-connected SVGs, (2) SVG has been widely used and its cost is transparent, and (3) the rating range of common SVGs is wide enough to cover the potential MMC-DDI.
Table A2 shows the deal prices of several high capacity SVGs built in China from 2013 to 2018.
As (15) shows, the converter rating of SVG is approximately equal to its rated output power, so the converter cost can be directly evaluated with the SVG deal price. As
Table A2 shows, SVG cost is basically proportional to the rating, and its unit cost is around 15,000
$/Mvar. For some SVGs over 60 Mvar, the unit cost is 40% higher. This is because there are only a few applications for such high-power SVGs, thus their R&D cost is higher. Moreover, such high-power SVG usually require higher reliability and larger configuration margin, and this also increases the device cost. For simplicity, here the MMC converter cost is estimated with the average unit price 15,000
$/Mvar.
When a transformer is inserted as
Figure 4, the transformer would bring a cost itself.
Table A3 shows the deal prices of several 10 MVA-class rectifier transformers built in China. As is shown, the cost of 10 MVA rectifier transformer is about
$86,000, about half of the same rating SVG. With the rating growth of transformer, its unit cost decreases rapidly. For a 56 MVA transformer, its unit cost is 4400
$/Mvar and about 1/3 of a similar rating SVG. For a 100 MVA transformer, its unit cost reduces to 3300
$/Mvar and about 1/6 of the same rating SVG.
Based on these cost data, it can be obtained that the cost of a common transformer is much lower than that of the same-rating MMC converter.
In the proposed configuration of MMC-DDI, it can get a minimum MMC converter rating at the cost of an extra transformer. In order to quantitatively compare the economics of the proposed configuration, the costs of MMC-DDI with and without the transformer can be expressed as
where
Pno presents the cost of MMC-DDI with no transformer, and
presents the cost of the MMC converter when its AC-side voltage is equal to the grid voltage.
Pwith presents the cost of the MMC-DDI with a transformer;
Ptrans presents the transformer cost.
presents the cost of the MMC converter with an AC-side input voltage of
.
As long as the cost of MMC-DDI with transformer is lower than that without a transformer, i.e., the reduced converter cost is greater than transformer cost, the proposed configuration structure is cost-effective. At this point, a transformer can be inserted on the AC side of converter to improve the system economy. Otherwise, this is no need to plug in the transformer.
4.3. Applicable Scope of the Proposed Configuration
Compared with the traditional MMC-DDI structure, the proposed MMC-DDI configuration structure requires an extra transformer. It seems that this would increase the cost of the total system, and partially offset the advantages of the MMC topology. However, in fact, the converter rating of traditional MMC-DDI varies greatly with its AC-side voltage, thus the insertion of transformer can sometimes reduce the converter rating and its cost. As long as the reduction of the converter cost is sufficient to offset the transformer cost, the proposed MMC-DDI structure is cost-effective.
According to the cost comparison data of the converter and transformer in the previous section, the unit cost of an MMC converter is generally much higher than that of a conventional transformer, especially for large-capacity converters above 50 MVA. Moreover, the reduced converter rating caused by an introduction of transformer is sometimes much higher than the transformer rating.
In order to obtain quantitative guidance, here an assumption is made of the cost of converter and SVG:
- A
The converter cost is approximately considered to be proportional to the converter rating.
- B
The transformer cost is a quarter of the same rating MMC converter cost.
Based on the above quantitative assumption, we can get the following conclusions:
When the ratio of the grid line voltage to DC-side output voltage exceeds 2.0 or falls below 0.25, the overall cost of MMC-DDI with a transformer is less than that without transformer, i.e., a transformer can be inserted on the AC side of a converter to improve the system economy.
When the ratio is between 0.25–2.0, the cost of the transformer exceeds its revenue. In that case, no transformer is required.
Indeed, for the common high-voltage transmission lines up to 500 kV, the required ice-melting voltage is generally less than 15 kV. Under such DC voltage range, if the MMC-DDI is connected to a 35 kV network, the grid voltage is more than two times the ice-melting DC voltage. In that case, the proposed MMC-DDI configuration is more applicable than the traditional one. However, if MMC-DDI is connected to a 10 kV distribution network, the grid voltage is usually among 0.25–2.0 times DC voltage, thus the traditional configuration is more applicable. In China, almost all of the distribution network voltage of 500 kV substations is 35 kV. Thus, at least for 500 kV transmission lines, the proposed MMC-DDI configuration is superior to the traditional configuration in most cases.
6. Discussion
Concerning the converter rating of MMC-DDI presented in this paper, the goal is to improve the economics of MMC-DDI while maintaining the same output de-icing characteristics. It turns out that, for a given DC ice-melting requirement, the converter rating of MMC-DDI varies greatly with its AC-side input voltage. Then, it is proposed to insert a transformer on the AC side of the MMC converter so that the converter rating as well as its cost can be significantly reduced, and then the economics of MMC-DDI can be improved.
It seems that this proposed configuration scheme is contradictory to traditional understanding of the MMC structure. Conventionally, in the common MMC system such as SVG, the AC side input transformers are expected to be avoided as much as possible.
This difference can be explained due to the converter characteristic of MMC-DDI having significant differences with that of the common MMC system:
- (1)
In an SVG, both the arm voltage and current contain only an AC component. As a result, in the case of a certain output power, the arm voltage is inversely proportional to arm current, thus the converter rating remains basically constant under any AC-side voltage. In that case, if a transformer was configured on the AC side of MMC converter, it has little influence on the converter rating while increasing a transformer. Therefore, in the common SVG, it tries to avoid a transformer.
- (2)
In the MMC-DDI, the arm voltage and arm current of converter contain both DC and AC components. As a result of the crossover between the DC and AC components, the converter rating of MMC-DDI varies greatly with its AC-side voltage. Due to such converter characteristics, a transformer can affect the converter rating. In this case, although the introduction of transformer will increase transformer cost, it can cause a cost increment or reduction of the converter. As long as the reduction of the converter cost is sufficient to offset the transformer cost, the introduction of the transformer is cost-effective. In addition, because the unit cost of MMC converter is generally much higher than that of the transformer, the above condition is easy to satisfy under the typical DC ice melting system parameters. Therefore, the optimized configuration scheme proposed in this paper is cost-effective in many cases.
It should be noted that the MMC-DDI can have two operation modes: ice-melting mode and SVG mode. This paper only considers the requirement of the ice melting mode, while not analyzing the operating characteristics of the SVG mode. In the optimization design process, the requirements of SVG mode have not been taken into account. This requirement can be further studied to get more comprehensive optimization results.
7. Conclusions
An MMC-based DC de-icer has been recognized as a promising de-icing solution. Conventionally, the MMC-DDI is recommended to be directly connected to the grid without a transformer.
In this paper, the converter rating of MMC-DDI was quantitatively analyzed. For a given DC ice-melting requirement, the converter rating varies greatly with its AC-side input voltage, and its minimum is 2.9 times the output ice-melting power. When the grid access point voltage is far more than DC de-icing voltage, the conventional MMC-DDI structure requires a far higher converter rating than its output de-icing power, thus the economy of MMC-DDI is very poor.
In order to improve the economy of MMC-DDI, this paper proposes an optimized MMC-DDI configuration structure in which a common two-winding transformer should be inserted at the AC-side of converter in some cases. Thus, the converter rating can be greatly reduced at the cost of an extra transformer. Since the cost of transformer is much lower than the same rating MMC converter, the introduction of transformer is cost-effective in many cases.Actually, for most 500 kV transmission lines, the optimized MMC-DDI configuration is superior to the transformerless MMC-DDI.
A design example and simulation results are given in this paper. In the case of outputting the same de-icing characteristics, the optimized converter rating is reduced from 151 MVA to 68 MVA, and the saved cost on the converter is much higher than the cost of the transformer, thus the total cost of MMC-DDI system is reduced by 48%. At the same time, the total floor space of MMC-DDI system is also greatly reduced by 22%, while, in total, the weight has a small increase.
This analysis and case show that, although the transformer is not technically necessary in an MMC-DDI, it can actually bring considerable benefits related to the total cost and space of MMC-DDI.
This conclusion is conducive to the optimized configuration of modular multilevel DC de-icer, and then to its engineering application for high voltage transmission lines.