Surge arresters – Rockwell Automation 7000A PowerFlex Medium Voltage AC Drive (A Frame) - ForGe Control (PanelView 550) User Manual

Page 132

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4-6

Component Definition and Maintenance

7000A-UM151D-EN-P – March 2013

7000 “A” Frame



Converter Cabinet

The converter cabinet contains three rectifier modules and three inverter
modules. Figure 4.5 shows a 3300/4160 V converter with a PWM
Rectifier.


Isolated Gate Driver Power Supplies (IGDPS) are mounted on the
cabinet’s right side sheet (6600 V, 2400 V Drives) and on the cabinet’s
left side sheet (3300 V, 4160 V Drives).

Thermal sensors are installed on the top module of the inverter and
rectifier. The exact location depends on the drive configuration.

Surge Arresters

Description

Heavy duty distribution class surge arresters are used for transient
overvoltage protection in the drives with AFE rectifiers. The arresters are
certified as per ANSI/IEEE Std C62.11-1993.


The surge arresters are basically MOVs, with or without an air gap in
series, packed in sealed housing. They provide overvoltage protection
similar to what the TSN module does. They differ from the TSN in that
fusing is not required for the operation of surge arresters.


There are 3 types of surge arresters depending on the voltage class of the
drive as shown in the table below:

Drive voltage

2.4 kV

3.3 kV

4.16kV, 4.8 kV

6.0-6.9 kV

Arrester rating (RMS)

3 kV

6 kV

9 kV

Arrester MCOV (RMS)

2.55

5.10

7.65


The most severe temporary overvoltage occurs when one phase is
grounded in an ungrounded system. The full line-to-line voltage is applied
to the arrester in this case. The arresters are designed to operate under this
condition continuously without any problems as shown by their Maximum
Continuous Operating Voltage (MCOV) rating.


There are three Y-connected surge arresters attached to the incoming MV
lines. The neutral point of the arresters is connected to the ground bus.

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