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I Want to Know How a High Impedance


Differential Scheme Works
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High Impedance Differential Scheme Testing


High impedance di erential relays are some of the easiest relays to test.

1. Isolate the relay from the trip circuit and voltage inputs.

2. Connect your test-set voltage channel across the relay AC input.

3. Connect your test-set sensing input to the relay trip output.

4. Perform an overvoltage pickup test.


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5. Perform an overvoltage timing test. (Be aware that de nite time elements typically have a curve. W
discuss this in detail in the How to Test Protective Relays Online Seminar.)

6. Return the relay to service.

(We discuss the details of the generic test procedures involved in The Relay Testing Handbook: Principle
and Practice and the How to Test Protective Relays Online Seminar.)

The only thing you really need to be concerned with is that many high impedance di erential rela
have contacts applied in parallel with the voltage input like the external ones shown in the previo
drawing. These contacts short the voltage inputs when the relay operates to help prevent high
voltages in the circuit. From your test-set’s perspective, a high impedance load has suddenly
changed to a short-circuit that overloads the channel. You may have to get creative to nd out wh
voltage was applied before the overload, depending on how your test-set handles voltage channe
overloads.

High Impedance Differential Scheme Basics


How the scheme works is more complicated than it looks. I thought this would be a pretty easy
answer. It turns out that there are a couple of assumptions that aren’t explained very well in mos
textbooks, papers, and online explanations. I had a lot of help with this question from Rodney
Hughes at Rod Hughes Consulting Pty. Ltd. (www.rodhughesconsulting.com). His explanations ar
much more comprehensive than this one and I highly recommend you visit his website to really d
into it.

We discuss generator and transformer di erential protection in The Relay Testing Handbook:
Principles and Practice, where we review how tap and slope characteristics can compensate for:

● different voltage classes,

● different CT ratios,

● different CT accuracy classes,

● and phase shifts on either side of the protected device.

We can apply the same principles to buss protection as shown in the following diagram:

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This scheme can protect a buss, but we have some new concerns that must be addressed:

● What happens when we want to add a feeder to the buss and there aren’t enough inputs to the relay?

● There are a lot of calculations involved in traditional differential protection that add time before the re
can trip. We want the relay to trip as fast as possible.

● Generators and transformers have built-in current limiting characteristics that aren’t found in busses.
saturation is much more likely to occur in buss faults.)

High impedance di erential protection can help with all of these problems, but rst we need to
apply some rules:

● All CT’s connected to the high impedance differential must have the same:

● Ratio

● Accuracy class

● Construction, or operating properties

● All the CT’s must be connected in parallel

● The point where all the CTs tie together should be equidistant from all CTs

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● The burden rating/saturation voltage must be sized appropriately

● No other equipment can be connected to the CT outputs

Once we apply all of the rules, our high impedance di erential protection scheme starts to look l
the following diagram:

This scheme is the example used in Application Guidelines for Microprocessor-Based, High-Impedan
Bus Di erential Relays (Stanley E. Zocholl and David Costello, Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories
Inc.). The 87 relay was initially a simple overcurrent relay when a 20,000A fault current was applie
They measured the following current through the relay:

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That’s a lot of di erential current! But it’s not sinusoidal. Actually, it looks a lot like the di erentia
current (Idi ) in a saturated CT as shown in this graph from Considerations for Using High-Impedan
or Low-Impedance Relays for Bus Di erential Protection (Ken Behrendt, David Costello, and Stanley
Zocholl Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories, Inc.)

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A stabilizing resistance was added in series with the overcurrent element to create a high impeda
di erential scheme as shown below:

Can you guess what happens to the current after we add the stabilizing resistor? If we apply Ohm
Law, 160A * 2000Ω = 320,000V across the 87Z element. That can’t be right, can it?

The following graph shows what happened after the resistor was added to the circuit.

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Where did all that current go? This introduces a concept that doesn’t have a clear answer in
textbooks or papers. Here are some explanations:

● “To improve security during external faults, we add a large stabilizing resistance in series with the low-
impedance overcurrent relay. This reduces the differential current to a milliamp level and allows the
secondary current to ow between the CTs.” Application Guidelines for Microprocessor-Based, High-
Impedance Bus Differential Relays (Stanley E. Zocholl and David Costello, Schweitzer Engineering
Laboratories, Inc.)

● “… a high-impedance relay unit… tends to force the false-differential currents through the current
transformers rather than the relay operating coil.” Applied Protective Relaying (1979 Westinghouse Elec
Corporation)

● “This scheme loads the CTs with a high-impedance to force the error differential current through the C
instead of the relay operating coil.” Protective Relaying: Principles and Applications Second Edition (J. Lewi
Blackburn)

Other papers and textbooks refer to this di erential current as the “slush” or “spill” currents.
However, I don’t think they mean the sinusoidal di erential current caused by CT mismatch. I thin
they mean the non-sinusoidal currents that occur when CTs saturate. If a CT saturates, the norm
high, non-sinusoidal currents will nd the shortest path home. 2000Ω is a much higher impedanc
than the CT secondary circuits around it because the current is owing in the same direction dur
an external fault.  This means the non-sinusoidal currents will nd a path through the CT seconda
currents instead of the di erential circuit.
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Di erential current still ows through the di erential circuit, but it is the normal sinusoidal
di erential current created by CT mismatch.

A high impedance di erential relay can have a current setting that monitors the current through
87 element. In this case, the setting must be higher than 0.016Arms (peak * 0.707 = 0.022 * 0.707
otherwise the relay will trip for a fault outside the zone of protection as per the measurements in
the example.

The high impedance element can also be set in voltage. The voltage measured by the 87Z elemen
32V (0.016A * 2000Ω). This means the 87Z setting must be greater than 32V or the relay will trip
during faults outside the zones of protection. (Both settings should be much higher.  We’ll cover
what the setting should be in the next post about high impedance di erential protection.)

Some high impedance di erential relays are actually current relays that use Ohm’s Law to create
setting in volts.

What happens if the fault is inside the zone of protection?

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In this situation, the current owing into the zone of protection doesn’t equal the current owing
out. The secondary currents aren’t mostly cancelling each other out like they were in an external
fault; they are both pushing in the same direction and looking for the lowest impedance path hom
In this case, the internal impedances of the CTs are acting as open-circuits (more on this in the ne
post); so the CTs try to push current through the 2000Ω resistor. 166.66A through a 2000Ω resist
333,320V. The CTs probably won’t be able to generate 333,320V, but the secondary voltage can
theoretically rise to the system voltage.

The system voltage (or 333,320V) is probably a little higher than the CT saturation voltage; so the
will start to saturate immediately. The relay won’t be looking at the saturation di erential current
showed you earlier; it will see something like the red line in the following graph:

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This waveform shape can cause problems and time delays with digital relays that must measure
voltage/current input, analyze the waveform, and then evaluate whether to trip, or not. This can
create extra time between the fault inception and the relay operation that doesn’t happen with a
solid-state, or single-feature high impedance di erential relay. High impedance di erential relay
applications may be one of the few instances where you might be better o installing the simples
relay possible.

System voltage can cause a lot of damage to the wiring and equipment typically installed with CT
secondaries! An MOV or other non-linear resistor is always applied in parallel high impedance
di erential schemes to limit the amount of voltage applied to the secondary circuit.  When the CT
saturate, the non-linear resistor will clip the voltage peaks to keep the secondary voltage at
reasonable levels.

In the end, our high impedance di erential scheme will look like the following diagram with:

● A stabilizing resistor (Rs) to force the false-differential currents through the CTs instead of the different
circuit

● A current detection unit (87) or voltage detection unit (87Z) set to trip if the differential current or vol
is greater than its setpoint

● An MOV to limit the possible voltage created across the differential circuit

● An 86 contact that will close after the relay trips to ensure no dangerous voltages are applied to the
secondary circuit.  It can also allow overcurrent functions inside the relay to operate other protective
elements, such as breaker fail, if required

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I hope you’ll read the next post in this series to learn more about high impedance busbar protect
where we explain why 32V/0.016A would be terrible settings for this relay.

We will really dig into the math while looking at the following topics in the next high impedance
di erential scheme post:

● What size CT should you use?

● What happens inside the circuit during an external fault when one or more CTs saturate?

● What happens inside the circuit during an internal fault?

● What happens inside the circuit during an internal fault when one or more CTs saturate?

In the meantime, you can click the image below and we’ll send you a cheat sheet summary of this
post you can take with you:

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