Monitoring device and surge arrester system
US-2016261106-A1 · Sep 8, 2016 · US
US10466294B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-10466294-B2 |
| Application number | US-201916238927-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Jan 3, 2019 |
| Priority date | Jul 12, 2016 |
| Publication date | Nov 5, 2019 |
| Grant date | Nov 5, 2019 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
A sensor to monitor health of surge arresters such as metal oxide arresters is disclosed. The sensor includes a housing; a sensor assembly contained in the housing, the sensor assembly including an electronics board to receive, transmit, process, and store signals; and a voltage measurement strap extending around a periphery of the housing, the voltage measurement strap being electrically connected to the electronics board and configured to measure voltage using electric field.
Opening claim text (preview).
We claim: 1. A surge arrester sensor configured to monitor a health of a surge arrester, comprising: (a) a housing; (b) a sensor assembly contained in the housing, the sensor assembly including an electronics board to receive, transmit, process, and store signals; and (c) a voltage measurement strap extending around a periphery of the housing, the voltage measurement strap being electrically connected to the electronics board and configured to measure voltage using electric field, wherein the voltage measurement strap is insulated from a sidewall of the housing by insulating standoffs positioned between the voltage measurement strap and the sidewall. 2. The surge arrester sensor according to claim 1 , further including a central shaft extending through a center of the housing between a first arrester side of the housing and a second non-arrester side of the housing, the central shaft being grounded only to the second non-arrester side of the housing to reduce a capacitive current measured from the surge arrester sensor to ground. 3. The surge arrester sensor according to claim 2 , further comprising a current transformer positioned around the central shaft, the current transformer being electrically connected to the electronics board to measure leakage current. 4. The surge arrester sensor according to claim 1 , wherein the surge arrester sensor is attached to an energized end of the surge arrester. 5. The surge arrester sensor according to claim 1 , further including: (a) a power source electrically connected to the electronics board to provide electrical current to the electronics board; and (b) an RF antenna electrically connected to the electronics board to transmit and receive the signals. 6. A method of determining a health of a surge arrester using the surge arrester sensor of claim 1 , comprising: (a) attaching the surge arrester sensor to an energized end of the surge arrester; (b) using the voltage measurement strap to measure electric field on the energized end of the surge arrester and derive an energization voltage waveform therefrom; (c) using the electronics board to process measured voltage waveforms produced by the voltage measurement strap and determine metrics; and (d) using an antenna electrically connected to the electronics board to transmit the metrics to a remote location. 7. The method according to claim 6 , further comprising: (a) using a current transformer to measure leakage current; (b) using a Rogowski coil to measure surge currents diverted by the surge arrester; and (c) using the electronics board to process measured currents waveforms produced by the current transformer and Rogowski coil and determine metrics. 8. The method according to claim 7 , wherein the metrics are representative of total leakage current, residual and resistive leakage current, third harmonic of the residual and resistive leakage current, applied voltage, and temperature. 9. The method according to claim 6 , further including the step of using the electronics board to set thresholds for alarms based on the processed measured voltage waveforms. 10. The method according to claim 9 , wherein when the metrics exceed the thresholds, alarms and/or alerts are provided to instruct personnel to perform an action selected from the group consisting of repair, replace, and inspect the arrester. 11. A surge arrester sensor, comprising: (a) a housing having a sensor assembly contained therein, the housing including first and second spaced-apart ends interconnected by a sidewall; (b) a voltage measurement strap extending around a periphery of the housing and electrically connected to the sensor assembly; and (c) a central shaft extending through a center of the housing, the central shaft having a first distal end attached to an energized end of a surge arrester and a second distal end connected to an energized conductor, wherein the voltage measurement strap is insulated from the housing by insulating standoffs positioned between the voltage measurement strap and the housing, and wherein voltage measurement strap is configured to measure voltage using electric field. 12. The surge arrester sensor according to claim 11 , wherein the sensor assembly includes: (a) an electronics board to receive, transmit, process, and store signals; (b) a Rogowski coil electrically connected to the electronics board to measure surge currents diverted by the surge arrestor; and (c) a current transformer electrically connected to the electronics board to measure leakage current. 13. The surge arrester sensor according to claim 12 , wherein the current transformer is positioned around the central shaft and is constructed of a ferromagnetic core wound with copper wire.
Circuits therefor {, e.g. for generating test voltages, sensing circuits (G01R31/1209 - G01R31/1227 take precedence; for testing switches G01R31/327)} · CPC title
using coils without a magnetic core, e.g. Rogowski coils · CPC title
of surge arresters (monitoring overvoltage diverters or arresters H02H3/048) · CPC title
Overvoltage protection resistors; Arresters · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.