IEEE 605-2008
$50.92
IEEE Guide for Bus Design in Air Insulated Substations (Inactive Reserved)
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
IEEE | 2008 |
Revision Standard – Inactive-Reserved. A proper design of the substation bus ensures a safe and reliable operation of the substation and the power system. Two different types of buses are used in substations, the rigid bus and the strain (cable). This guide provides information on the different bus arrangements used in substations stating the advantages and disadvantages of each. Also it provides information as related to each bus type and construction. Once the bus type is selected, this guide provides the calculation tools for each bus type. Based on these calculations, the engineer can specify the bus size, forces acting on the bus structure, number of mounting structures required, and hardware requirements.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
---|---|
1 | IEEE Std 605-2008 Front Cover |
3 | Title Page |
6 | Introduction Notice to users Laws and regulations Copyrights |
7 | Updating of IEEE documents Errata Interpretations Patents |
8 | Participants |
12 | Contents |
15 | Important Notice 1. Overview 1.1 Scope |
16 | 1.2 Purpose 2. Normative references |
17 | 3. Definitions |
18 | 4. Bus arrangements |
19 | 4.1 Single bus single breaker arrangement (SBSB) |
20 | 4.2 Main and transfer bus arrangement (MTB) 4.3 Double bus single breaker arrangement (DBSB) |
21 | 4.4 Ring bus arrangements (RB) |
22 | 4.5 Breaker and half bus arrangement (B-1/2) |
23 | 4.6 Double bus double breaker arrangement (DBDB) |
24 | 4.7 Bus arrangements comparison |
26 | 5. Bus design considerations 5.1 Preliminary bus design considerations |
27 | 5.2 Construction type |
29 | 5.3 Disconnect switches 6. Conductors 6.1 General 6.2 Materials |
32 | 6.3 Rigid conductors |
33 | 6.4 Flexible conductors |
34 | 6.5 Field bending of rigid conductors |
35 | 6.6 Connections |
39 | 7. Design procedure 7.1 Design specification 7.2 Select bus arrangement 7.3 Design considerations 7.4 Select conductor type |
40 | 7.5 Structure design |
41 | 7.6 Review calculations 7.7 Select materials 8. Ampacity 8.1 Heat balance |
43 | 8.2 Conductor temperature limits |
44 | 8.3 Ampacity tables 9. Corona and radio interference 9.1 Determination of corona performance |
45 | 9.2 EMI tolerance of substation equipment 9.3 Reducing EMI |
46 | 9.4 Reducing corona generated radiated and conductor signal interference |
47 | 10. Overview of mechanical design of bus structures 10.1 Introduction 10.2 General mechanical design procedure |
49 | 10.3 Calculation methods |
50 | 11. Loads on bus structure 11.1 Gravitational loads |
56 | 11.2 Wind loads |
67 | 11.3 Short circuit loads |
97 | 12. Dimensional, strength, and other design considerations 12.1 Maximum allowable span based on vertical deflection limits |
100 | 12.2 Maximum allowable span length based on conductor fiber stress |
102 | 12.3 Simplified evaluation of insulator cantilever force |
110 | 12.4 Strength of porcelain insulators |
112 | 12.5 Induced vibrations |
113 | 12.6 Natural frequency of rigid conductors |
114 | 12.7 Vibration attenuation |
116 | 12.8 Clearances considerations 12.9 Rigid bus fittings |
117 | Annex A (informative) Bibliography |
119 | Annex B (informative) Rigid bus conductor ampacity |
129 | Annex C (informative) Thermal considerations for outdoor bus-conductor design |
153 | Annex D (informative) Corona and substation bus design |
167 | Annex E (informative) Physical properties of common bus conductors |
190 | Annex F (informative) of short circuit analysis on rigid bus systems |
197 | Annex G (informative) Calculation example of short circuit analysis on strain bus systems |
204 | Annex H (informative) Example rigid bus design |
225 | Annex I (informative) Example strain bus design |