1 / 21

INVESTIGATION INTO THE DESIGN OF A 6600V LONGWALL MINING SYSTEM

INVESTIGATION INTO THE DESIGN OF A 6600V LONGWALL MINING SYSTEM. Presented by Adrian Trevor. Overview. What is a Longwall? Why bother moving to 6600V? Predicted Future Power Requirements Cable size selection Power flow modeling of proposed system Future work. Overview.

yonah
Download Presentation

INVESTIGATION INTO THE DESIGN OF A 6600V LONGWALL MINING SYSTEM

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. INVESTIGATION INTO THE DESIGN OF A 6600V LONGWALL MINING SYSTEM Presented by Adrian Trevor

  2. Overview • What is a Longwall? • Why bother moving to 6600V? • Predicted Future Power Requirements • Cable size selection • Power flow modeling of proposed system • Future work

  3. Overview • Used because of efficiency ( Cutting and recovery rates) • Continuous process once started

  4. Electrical Overview • All Drives at 3300V • Shearer > 2MW • AFC (Armoured Face Conveyor) 2.55MW • BSL (Beam Stage Loader) 300kW • Crusher 300kW • Hydraulic Pumps 600kW • Shearer Water Pump 200kW

  5. Why 6600V? • Ultimate reason is to improve torque for motors • Also allows increase in installed power without extremely large cable sizes • Allows longer monorail hence less flits

  6. The torque of a motor is proportional to the voltage squared. At 3300V, ↑ currents are drawn which causes voltage drops in all supply cables At 6600V, ↓ currents, and any voltage drop is a ↓ % of rated voltage Ideally in new system we want torque to remain above 90% at all times. Motor Torque

  7. Increased Power • An increase in voltage allows power increases to be obtained without increases in conductor sizes • E.g Type 240.3 cable with 50sq mm conductor can carry 170A which at 3300V is approx 970kW compared to 1940kW at 6600V • However physical dimensions and mass of cable ↑ marginally due to extra insulation required • In most cases cable sizes will be reduced

  8. Longer Monorail • ↑ Voltage allows potential length of monorail to be increased by ↓ voltage drop • If monorail length is doubled this has the potential of reducing monorail flits from approx 8 per block to 4 • Each flit takes approx 8 hrs • 8hrs production = 14000 tonnes x 4 flits = 56000 tonnes • 56000 tonnes x $40 = $2.24 million!! per block

  9. Work Completed • Predicted future power requirements • Cable sizing calculations • Power flow study

  10. Future Power • Future power requirements can not simply be increased linearly. i.e. increase all items by 10% • Each piece of machinery requires it’s operation to be analysed to determine what, if any power increases are required. • Shearer • Increase in cutter motors to 1000kW each • Increase in traction motors to 165kW each • Total installed shearer power of 2.4MW

  11. Future Power • AFC • Considering increase in face width to 400m from 265m • Increase in power to 4 x 1000kW motors (2@tg,2@mg) • BSL • Increase in power to 2 x 300kW motors • Crusher • Increase in power to 1 x 300kW motor • Hyd Pumps and Shearer Water Pump • Increase hydraulic pumps to a total of 1000kW (Fat Face) • Determined that current SWP is suitable

  12. Future Power • This will result in a total installed power of 8.6MW, which is an ↑ of approx 50% on present

  13. Cable Selection • Cable selection is dependant on 2 main conditions • Current carrying capacity • Voltage drop • Current carrying capacity relates to the thermal limit of the cable • Heating effect of current in a cable (I2R losses) • Ability of insulation to dissipate this heat • Voltage drop is dependant on cable size, length and current • Must remain below 5% to keep torque above 90%

  14. Current Carrying Capacity • The heating effect on a cable occurs over a continuous time, and instantaneous values are not of a large concern. • FLC of motors NOT used to determine this. • Future average currents are used by projecting present averages to future Voltage and Power levels. • Present averages determined via Scada over a fixed period of time.

  15. Cable Selection • Example of Scada Data for TG AFC Motor with calculated average.

  16. Voltage Drop • Most important at motor startup • Full Operational Load (FOL) currents were determined by using the future FLC of the motor and allocating each motor a load factor. PF=0.85% and n=0.9% • Voltage drop calcs performed using FOL in that cable plus the starting current (6xFLC) of the largest motor.

  17. Cable Selection • Main Limiting factor was the voltage drop, most cables are significantly overrated in current carrying capacity to achieve acceptable voltage drop levels.

  18. Load Flow Simulation • A load flow simulation was completed at future levels using “EasyPower” simulation software. • Results confirmed calculated values • 3 scenarios were simulated • Full operational load • Full operational load with TG AFC Motor starting • Full operational load with 1 Shearer Cutter Motor starting

  19. Load Flow Simulation

  20. Future Work • Investigate issues that DMR has • Presently CMRA prohibits voltages >4kV • Investigate availability of equipment e.g motors, plugs, cables switching gear etc • Also sizing due to ↑ creepage and clearance values • Investigate issues with fault current energy, in relation to flame proof enclosures. • Investigate effects of EMI on control systems • Clearances inside enclosures • Effect on pilot core communication systems

  21. Questions??

More Related