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SIL

The surge impedance loading (SIL) of a transmission line is the MW loading at which reactive power production and consumption is balanced. The SIL depends on the line's surge impedance, which is a function of the line's capacitive and inductive reactances, and the voltage of the line. Specifically, the SIL is equal to the square of the line's voltage divided by its surge impedance. At loadings above the SIL, the line absorbs reactive power from the system, while below the SIL it supplies reactive power.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
249 views

SIL

The surge impedance loading (SIL) of a transmission line is the MW loading at which reactive power production and consumption is balanced. The SIL depends on the line's surge impedance, which is a function of the line's capacitive and inductive reactances, and the voltage of the line. Specifically, the SIL is equal to the square of the line's voltage divided by its surge impedance. At loadings above the SIL, the line absorbs reactive power from the system, while below the SIL it supplies reactive power.

Uploaded by

sahale shera
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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The surge impedance loading or SIL of a transmission line is the MW loading

of a transmission line at which a natural reactive power balance occurs. The


following brief article will explain the concept of SIL.

Transmission lines produce reactive power (Mvar) due to their natural


capacitance. The amount of Mvar produced is dependent on the transmission
line’s capacitive reactance (XC) and the voltage (kV) at which the line is
energized. In equation form the Mvar produced is:

Transmission lines also utilize reactive power to support their magnetic fields.
The magnetic field strength is dependent on the magnitude of the current
flow in the line and the line’s natural inductive reactance (XL). It follows then
that the amount of Mvar used by a transmission line is a function of the
current flow and inductive reactance. In equation form the Mvar used by a
transmission line is:

A transmission line’s surge impedance loading or SIL is simply the MW


loading (at a unity power factor) at which the line’s Mvar usage is equal to
the line’s Mvar production. In equation form we can state that the SIL occurs
when:

If we take the square root of both sides of the above equation and then
substitute in the formulas for XL (=2pfL) and XC (=1/2pfC) we arrive at:

The term in the above equation is by definition the “surge impedance”.


The theoretical significance of the surge impedance is that if a purely
resistive load that is equal to the surge impedance were connected to the
end of a transmission line with no resistance, a voltage surge introduced to
the sending end of the line would be absorbed completely at the receiving
end. The voltage at the receiving end would have the same magnitude as
the sending end voltage and would have a voltage phase angle that is
lagging with respect to the sending end by an amount equal to the time
required to travel across the line from sending to receiving end.

The concept of a surge impedance is more readily applied to


telecommunication systems than to power systems. However, we can
extend the concept to the power transferred across a transmission line. The
surge impedance loading or SIL (in MW) is equal to the voltage squared (in
kV) divided by the surge impedance (in ohms). In equation form:

Note in this formula that the SIL is dependent only on the kV the line is
energized at and the line’s surge impedance. The line length is not a factor
in the SIL or surge impedance calculations. Therefore the SIL is not a
measure of a transmission line’s power transfer capability as it does not take
into account the line’s length nor does it consider the strength of the local
power system.

The value of the SIL to a system operator is realizing that when a line is
loaded above its SIL it acts like a shunt reactor—absorbing Mvar from the
system—and when a line is loaded below its SIL it acts like a shunt capacitor
—supplying Mvar to the system.

Figure 1 is a graphic illustration of the concept of SIL. This particular line has
a SIL of 450 MW. Therefore if the line is loaded to 450 MW (with no Mvar)
flow, the Mvar produced by the line will exactly balance the Mvar used by the
line.
Figure 1: Surge Impedance Loading of a Transmission Loading

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