As electrical workhorses with long lifespans, power transformers are critical elements of power grids, industrial plants, data centres, and other large consumer sites. But their operation is often taken for granted. When transformers fail, those failures can have devastating consequences. Consider the recent transformer fault in Paris that caused a blackout for 65,000 households, or the 2 million customers affected by a boil water advisory due to two transformer failures at a water purification plant in Houston, USA. Preventing such failures is key to ensuring business continuity and reducing operational costs.
New technologies allow for better transformer monitoring and analysis transformer tap changer diagram
A series of surveys by Midel of OEMs, businesses, and utilities professionals revealed that most had experienced transformer failures in the last five years. Half said such failures would significantly impact or halt operations. And a majority said that transformer maintenance – or lack thereof – is a significant concern but must be balanced with minimising downtime and maintenance costs.
It is difficult to predict when these critical units should undergo maintenance due to a lack of transparency into their operational health. Because of this, organisations often embrace a conservative approach, including running less load or scheduling earlier replacement which, in turn, can significantly impact OpEx and CapEx.
This measured approach is due, in part, to the transformers’ sealed, long-lived nature that has essentially made them a “black box.” Beyond annual oil tests and costly or inefficient monitoring systems, there has been no practical way of assessing their health while in service.
Traditionally, an organisation would have a long-term resident transformer specialist who had accumulated a mental record of all the transformers on the site. Familiar with significant risk events (e.g., overloads, lightning), faults, and maintenance work, this engineer’s institutional knowledge, combined with annual offline transformer oil testing results, was critical to making judgements regarding operational tolerances and the anticipated lifespan of any given transformer.
However, over the last decade, many experienced specialists have retired and been replaced by younger engineers with far less experience. The experts’ knowledge has not been documented so that new hires can easily access it. This creates an operational void in transformer maintenance, particularly when new hires are part of smaller teams responsible for a broader scope of equipment.
With these challenges, operations and maintenance teams need better visibility into transformer health.
5 key drivers to adopt continuous transformer monitoring and analysis
Until now, existing transformer maintenance solutions proved costly and ineffective. New condition-based maintenance approaches, like Schneider Electric’s EcoStruxure Transformer Expert, allow you to proactively head off any problems and make data-driven decisions about optimal maintenance and replacement times. This innovative continuous monitoring and analysis reduces overall downtime and can mitigate failure risks in your fleet.
Here are five reasons to embrace this new approach to transformer maintenance:
The grid is becoming more dynamic. The types of energy sources on the grid are changing and now include renewables, storage, electric vehicle charging, and more. This changes the grid profile, particularly with the addition of wind and solar, which can create sudden changes in transformer loads, higher harmonic content, and bidirectional flows. This new paradigm means you can’t use past data to forecast the future, as these new conditions will impact transformer aging differently.
Condition-based maintenance is more efficient. Maximising efficiency is critical when working with smaller teams and distributed resources. Continuous data analysis and intelligent notifications support a condition-based maintenance approach – also known as predictive maintenance – revealing degradation in performance before a failure occurs. It will help rank risks and prioritise maintenance, repair, and replacement to minimise OpEx and CapEx.
The impact of failures can be massive. When a failure occurs, it can take up to 6 months – even 12 months in some cases – to source a replacement due to supply chain issues. Continuous visibility of the health of all transformers will help you determine which of them are more likely to fail sooner and help you manage them appropriately toward the end of their life and prepare for their retirement.
Increasing lifespan helps reduce CapEx. The transformers close to failure are difficult to identify and often not the oldest in the fleet. This is frequently due to inadequate records about their history. A 60-year-old transformer might be doing fine, while some 25-year-old ones may be very close to the end of life due to experiencing higher loads or damaging surge events. To properly manage that risk curve, you need to be able to analyse transformer health at the mid-life point to see what conditions may be accelerating aging. Knowing this will allow you to perform appropriate maintenance or take other steps to ensure a longer lifespan. This minimises the need for costly replacements, allowing your CapEx to go to more critical projects – while reducing your carbon footprint.
Determining transformer health helps optimise operations. Imagine a substation with three transformers. You need to run one of them with 20% more load – which one do you choose? Transformer health analysis includes scenario modelling that will help you predict the impact on lifespan under different load conditions. Beyond maintenance decisions, you’ll make better decisions on optimising each asset’s operation. Can you risk overloading a transformer, or do you need to reduce the load on a transformer to extend its life? Real-time transformer analysis will give you the confidence to decide and act.
Schneider Electric’s new EcoStruxure Transformer Expert is an easy-to-deploy solution that addresses these unique transformer maintenance and monitoring needs – regardless of the manufacturer.
The EcoStruxure Transformer Expert monitoring solution gives operations and maintenance personnel unprecedented, continuous visibility into the health status of the transformers thanks to integrated IoT sensors and a cloud-based software analytics subscription. Predictive analytics enable accurate health and lifespan forecasting across entire fleets of transformers and offer proactive recommendations to help you make data-driven decisions regarding maintenance and replacement. To learn more, watch our video.
N.B. The information contained in this entry is provided by the above supplier, and does not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of the publisher
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