Title: National Renewable Energy Centre
1EWEA 2013 February, 2013, Vienna, Austria
OFFSHORE RENEWABLE PLANT HVDC POWER COLLECTOR AND
DISTRIBUTOR
National Renewable Energy Centre Chong Ng,
Principal Engineer Reliability
Validation Paul McKeever, RD Manager
2Narec Created by Government to stimulate the RE
industry, A Controlled and Independent Testing
Environment
Existing 50m blade test Still water tank Wave flume Simulated seabed Wind turbine training tower Electrical and materials laboratories New 3MW tidal turbine drive train - 2012 Offshore anemometry hub - 2012 100m blade test - 2012 15MW wind turbine drive train - 2013 99.9MW offshore wind demonstration site - 2013/14
3Presentation Contents
- Technical Paper Background
- Existing Systems
- HVAC transmission systems
- HVDC systems
- Proposed HVDC System
- Selected Challenges
- Conclusions
- Next Steps
4Technical Paper Background
- UK requires offshore wind to meet its renewable
energy generation targets (2020, 2030, 2050)
UK Energy Bill by 2020, 30 from Renewable
Energy - Likely to involve larger turbines (10MW? 20MW?)
FP6 UpWind Project - Offshore plant would benefit from an appropriate
power collection, transmission and distribution
technology - HVDC potentially provides better efficiency,
particularly over longer distances - Benefits from power semiconductor and copper cost
trends
5HVAC Transmission Systems
- Commonly used in many offshore wind farms
- Can suffer from excessive reactive current
- Increases cable losses
- Reduces power transfer capability
- Reactive power compensation required (extra
equipment) - Can suffer from high line losses and excessive
voltage drops - Extra cables required
- Inter-dependant characteristics need careful
consideration - Transmission voltage level, cable capacitance and
charging currents
6Existing HVDC Systems
- Modern HVDC systems generally have advantages
such as - Lower transmission losses
- Fully controllable power flow
- No reactive power generation or absorption
(cable only connections) - Reduce/eliminate AC harmonic filter with the
latest multilevel converter technologies (e.g.
MMC HVDC) - HVDC transmission systems can be categorised, by
the converters used, into three categories - Line-commutated Converters (LCC), Capacitor
Commutated Converters (CCC) and Voltage Source
Converters (VSC) as illustrated below - Point to point HVDC power transmission Wind
Farm Inter-array? - What do we want?
- A dedicated high efficiency, robust, flexible and
low cost power collection, transmission and
distribution technology for use within the wind
farm too
7Proposed HVDC System
- HVDC power transmission from the point of
generation - Reduce losses and components (i.e. make use of
Turbine MV converter and availability of HVDC
gird) - Multi-terminal HVDC system
- Increase availability
- Offers flexibility and redundancy
- Reduce cost
- Removal of/minimise offshore substation
- Reduced cable losses (HV operation)
8Proposed HVDC System
- Hybrid HVDC Transformer (figure shows simplified
circuit) - Steps up MVDC to HVDC
- Reduced voltage stress on primary side and
current stress on secondary side allows use of
off the shelf force commutation devices - Uses magnetic transformer to avoid high
conversion ratio - Potential to require less power capability from
switches (30) when compared with conventional
2-level 3-phase HVDC converter - Many potential challenges that need full
investigation (e.g. switching control, network
stability, economic impact, protection and
isolation)
9Proposed HVDC System
- Switching device comparison
- Proposed Hybrid HVDC Transformer vs.
conventional HVDC converter (3-phase 2-level
topology)
- Assumptions
- n number of series connected power switching
devices in half of the bridge arm - 6.5kV rated switching devices
- VSC-based HVDC converters use 3-phase, 2 (or
multi) level converter topology - Assumes 2 devices in series is sufficient to
withstand the MV voltage stress - 150kVdc example
- HVDC side needs n gt 30 devices in series
- For conventional VSC-based HVDC systems
- 6n gt 180 devices
- For hybrid HVDC transformer
- 4n 8 gt 128 devices
- 29 saving in power semiconductors used
10Selected Challenges
- The time to implement
- Dependent on development/readiness of the
offshore wind industry - Managing multi-vendor solutions
- Will this be a problem?
- Practical implementation (i.e. is it realistic?)
- Needs further investigation this is still a
concept - Will the subsea power cable size increase with no
centralised collector? - Shouldnt increase for similar voltage levels
the overall power stays the same - Would a platform still be required as a
maintenance hub? - A mobile platform could be used for this purpose
- Is there an operational impact?
- Turbine operation should be unaffected
- System optimum operation and control needs
developing
11Conclusions
- Potential advantages for offshore wind farm
applications - An alternative to AC and point to point HVDC
transmission topologies - Suitable installation in every single power
source - Increases flexibility and redundancy of the
entire HVDC system - Positive impact on wind farm availability and OM
costs - Eliminates/minimises the need for a centralised
offshore collection platform - Potential lower component count at converter
level - Modular component sets across the system
- 100MW power block in centralised system vs. 20 x
5MW power blocks in hybrid HVDC transformer
system - Increased component count at system level (due to
de-centralisation) - Balanced by no offshore substation and fewer
components, e.g. fewer power semiconductors and
filters
12Next Steps
- Investigate, in detail, the feasibility of this
HVDC system concept - Detailed study of the proposed hybrid HVDC
transformer - Explore the feasibility of the following
advantages - High flexibility leading to independent
turbines - Additional redundancy and high system
availability (no centralised substation) - High efficiency (power collection and OM
efficiency) - Cost reduction potential
- Installation in individual turbines
- Optimisation of materials (copper, semiconductor
devices) - Investigate the use of SiC switching devices
- Higher power density and heat tolerance
13Thank you for listening!
- Narec Contact Details
- Website www.narec.co.uk
- Technical Paper Authors
- chong.ng_at_narec.co.uk
- paul.mckeever_at_narec.co.uk