Английская Википедия:Chandrapur–Padghe HVDC transmission system

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Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Infobox power transmission line The Chandrapur–Padghe HVDC transmission system is an HVDC connection[1] between Chandrapur and Padghe (near Mumbai) in the state of Maharashtra in India, which was put into service in 1999.

It connects the coal-fired Chandrapur Super Thermal Power Station to the major load centre of Mumbai. The project has a Шаблон:Convert long bipolar overhead line. The transmission voltage is ±500 kV and the maximum transmission power is 1,500 megawatts. The scheme uses thyristor valves, arranged in a single twelve pulse bridge per pole. The project was built by ABB and BHEL, and is owned by Maharashtra State Electricity Board (MSEB).

The eastern (Chandrapur) converter station is located Шаблон:Convert from the Chandrapur back to back HVDC station. The close proximity of the two converter stations meant that the control systems needed to be carefully coordinated, a task made more challenging by the fact that the two stations were built by different manufacturers. To address this problem a series of joint simulation studies, involving the control equipment from both converter stations connected to a common simulator, was performed.[2]

Sites

Site Coordinates
Chandrapur converter station Шаблон:Coord
Padghe converter station Шаблон:Coord

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:GeoGroup


Шаблон:Powerline-stub Шаблон:India-struct-stub

  1. Adhikari, T., Isacsson, G., Ambekar, V.D., The Chandrapur-Padghe HVDC Bipole Transmission, CIGRÉ Symposium on HVDC, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, September 1999.
  2. Abbott, K.M., Aten, M., Two HVDC schemes in close proximity: a coordination study, CIGRÉ Session, Paris, 2000, paper reference 14-109.