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10/13/2014

An Example of the Effectiveness of Directional Overcurrent Relays (ANSI 67, 67N) | EEP

An Example of the Effectiveness of Directional


Overcurrent Relays (ANSI 67, 67N)
P o s te d O C T 1 0 2 0 14 b y E DV A R D in E NER GY A ND P O W ER , P R O TE CT IO N w i th 1 C O M M ENT

An Example of the Effectiveness of Directional Overcurrent Relays (ANSI 67, 67N) (photo credit: ashidaelectronics.com)

When fault currents can flow in more than one direction


When fault currents can flow in more than one direction with respect to the load current it is often
desirable to determine which direction the fault current is flowing and trip the appropriate devices
accordingly. This is usually due to the need to de-energize only those parts of the power system that
must be de-energized to contain a given fault.

Standard overcurrent relays cannot distinguish the direction of the current


flow. Directional relays (67, 67N) are required to perform this function.

An important concept in the application of directional overcurrent relays is polarization. Polarization is


the method used by the relay to determine the direction of current flow. For phase directional
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10/13/2014

An Example of the Effectiveness of Directional Overcurrent Relays (ANSI 67, 67N) | EEP

overcurrent relays, this is accomplished by the use of voltage transformers, which provide a voltage
signal to the relay and allow it to distinguish the current direction.
The details of polarization methods are not discussed here.

Because the voltage on a faulted phase can be unreliable, each phase is


restrained via the voltage from a different phase. Care must be used when
defining CT polarities as each manufacturer typically defines a
preferred polarity to match the their standard connection diagrams.
Polarization for a 67N relay is more difficult. They must be polarized with zero-sequence current
or zero-sequence voltage. Electromechanical 67N relays must be polarized via either a CT in the
source transformer neutral (zero-sequence current polarization) or three VTs connected with a wyeconnected primaries and broken-delta connected secondaries.

BASLER overcurrent solid-state relay

Solid-state 67N relays usually must be polarized the same way but do sometimes offer a choice of
either method. Microprocessor-based relays typically offer a choice of either method and, in some
cases, can self-polarize by calculating the zero-sequence voltage from the measured three-phase line
voltage.

An Example

As an example of the effectiveness of directional overcurrent relays, consider the primary-selective


system arrangement. The primary main and tie circuit breakers and an example of
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10/13/2014

An Example of the Effectiveness of Directional Overcurrent Relays (ANSI 67, 67N) | EEP

protective relaying for those circuit breakers are shown in Figure 1 below.

Figure 1 Example protective relaying arrangement for closed-transition primary-selective system

In Figure 1 the bus tie circuit breaker is normally-closed, paralleling the two utility feeds. Each main
circuit breaker and the bus tie circuit breaker are protected via 51 and 51N relays. The mains also
have 67 and 67N relays. Note that the 67 relays are polarized via the line voltage transformers, and
auxiliary voltage transformers connected in wye-broken delta are supplied for polarization of the 67N
relays.

The polarization results in the indicated tripping directions for these relays.

The need for the 67 and 67N relays can be demonstrated by considering a fault on one of the utility
feeds. Should utility feed #2, for example, experience a fault, the fault current will be supplied both
from the upstream system feeding utility feed #2 and from utility feed #1 through circuit breakers
52-M1, 52-T, and 52-M2. Because the 51 and 51N relays for 52-M1 and 52-M2 are likely
set identically, they will both respond to the fault at the same time, tripping 52-M1 and 52-M2 and deenergizing the entire downstream system.

To avoid this, the 67 and 67N relays are set to coordinate with the 51 and
51N relays, respectively, so that the 67 and 67N relays trip first.
For a fault on utility feed #2, the 67 and 67N relays for 52-M1 will not trip due to the fact that the
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10/13/2014

An Example of the Effectiveness of Directional Overcurrent Relays (ANSI 67, 67N) | EEP

current is flowing in the direction opposite to the tripping direction.


However, the 67 and 67N relays on 52-M2 will sense current in the tripping direction and trip 52-M2.
The downstream system is still energized by 52-M1 and 52-T after 52-M2 trips.
Reference: System Protection Bill Brown, P.E., Square D Engineering Services

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