Hunan Electric Power ›› 2026, Vol. 46 ›› Issue (2): 23-30.doi: 10.3969/j.issn.1008-0198.2026.02.004

• Power Grid Operation and Control • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Composite Arc Suppression Methods for Single-Phase Ground faults Based on fault Conductance Magnitude

WANG Wen1, WANG Da1, CHEN Muye1, LiU Weimin2   

  1. 1. Changsha University of Science & Technology, State Key Laboratory of Disaster Prevention & Reduction for Power Grid, Changsha 410114, China;
    2. Guangdong Power Grid Co., Ltd. foshan Power Supply Bureau, foshan 528010, China
  • Received:2025-11-12 Revised:2025-11-29 Online:2026-04-25 Published:2026-05-09

Abstract: Reliable arc suppression of ground faults is a critical guarantee for the safe and reliable operation of distribution networks. Generally, in the analysis of ground faults, it is assumed that the distribution network is three-phase balanced. Existing methods perform poorly in suppressing arcs when considering line impedance and asymmetrical loads in three-phase unbalanced distribution networks during single-phase ground faults. To address this issue, this paper proposes a hybrid method that combines current arc suppression and voltage arc suppression techniques. A distribution network model that accounts for asymmetrical line parameters and load imbalances is established and analyzed. By injecting current twice, the threshold value of ground conductance and the reference values for improving both arc suppression methods are calculated. When the ground conductance is less than the threshold, the voltage arc suppression method is used, and when the ground resistance is greater than or equal to the threshold, the current arc suppression method is employed. The proposed method can mitigate the impact of asymmetrical line parameters, ground impedance magnitude, and load imbalance, reducing the fault current to below the limit. finally, MATLAB/Simulink simulations verify the reliability and feasibility of the proposed arc suppression control strategy.

Key words: unbalanced power network, single-phase ground fault, voltage arc suppression method, injected current

CLC Number: