Single-phase grounding is the dominant fault type in urban power distribution networks. Because the total magnetic flux would not change around the cable under a single-phase grounding fault, ferromagnetic zero-sequence current sensors cannot distinguish the faulted phase of belted cables, which are the main type in 10 kV distribution networks. To fill this gap, a two-step methodology is proposed using an annular TMR magnetic sensor to measure the magnetic field intensity at six points on the cable surface and to distinguish the faulted phase using the magnetic field intensity differences between the TMRs. The first step is calculating the rotation angles between the six magnetic sensors and the three cable cores after installation. A differential evolution algorithm is used to calculate the rotation angles in the sensing model. The second step is to detect the fault phase under a single-phase grounding fault transient, with the magnetic field intensity difference taken as the criterion. The methodology is verified through simulation and experiment. The results show that the relative errors of the rotation angles are all less than 1%. Under a single-phase grounding fault, the faulted phase can be accurately identified. The proposed method can effectively identify the faulted phase of 10 kV three-core cables under single-phase grounding and has significant engineering application value.
Wang et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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