Title of Invention

AN INTERRUPTION AND DISCONNECTING DEVICE

Abstract An interruption and disconnecting device for high-and/or medium-voltage applications, comprising a disconnection chamber (67) and an interruption pole (54) having a casing (200) which delimits a free volume accommodating an interruption chamber (63) which contains a moving contact (59) and a fixed contact (64), said interruption pole (54) and said disconnection chamber (67) containing dielectrically insulating fluids, characterized in that said interruption chamber (63) is sealed with respect to the remaining part of the said interruption pole (54).
Full Text FORM 2
THE PATENTS ACT 1970 [39 OF 1970]
THE PATENTS RULES, 2003 COMPLETE SPECIFICATION
[See Section 10; rule 13]
"AN INTERRUPTION AND DISCONNECTING DEVICE"
ABB POWER TECHNOLOGIES S.P.A., of Piazzale Lodi, 3, 1-20137 Milano, Italy,
The following specification particularly describes the invention and the manner in which it is to be performed:



INIERRyPHQNTfrND DISCONNECTING DEVICE > DESCRIPTION The present invention relates to an interruption and disconnecting device for high- and/or medium-voltage applications, which contains dielectric insulation means and has a particular structure, so as to allow the reduction of the environmental impact of said insulation means.
It is known that the interruption and disconnecting devices of the art generally comprise at least one interruption chamber and a disconnection chamber which are connected to insulating bushings. These elements are arranged inside a structure which is sealed with respect to the surrounding environment and is filled with a fluid insulating medium.
With reference to figure 1, a block diagram is presented which illustrates an example of a typical structure of a known interruption and disconnecting device used in a high-voltage substation.
A conductor of a main power line, indicated by the arrow 2, is connected to a main distribution bar 3 by means of the interruption and disconnecting device 1. Said interruption and disconnecting device 1 comprises an insulating bushing 4 for connection to the line 2, a disconnection chamber 5, an interruption chamber 6, electric current measuring devices 7 and 8 arranged at the ends of the interruption chamber 6, and an insulating bushing 9 for connection to the bar 3 by means of a conductor 10. There are also two devices 11 and 12 used to earth the system.
The disconnection chamber 5 can be arranged both upstream and downstream of the interruption chamber 6.
The device I is completely filled with an insulating medium in order to prevent electrical discharges between the various parts that are at high potential differences.


A known embodiment of an interruption and disconnecting device according to the block diagram of figure 1 is presented with reference to figure 2. The insulating bushings 4 and 9 are arranged respectively in input and in output with respect to the interruption and disconnecting device 1. The insulating bushing 4 - contains the conductor 2 of the main power line, while the insulating bushing 9 contains the conductor 10 connected to the main distribution bar (not shown in figure 2).
The insulating bushing 4 is connected to the disconnection chamber 5 by means of a coupling 13. The disconnection chamber 5 contains a fixed contact 14 and a moving contact 15 for performing disconnection. An earthing device 11 is also connected to the chamber 5 and connects, if required, the main conductor 2 to the outer casing 16 of the device 1, which is at ground potential by means of the supports 17, 18 and 19. Actuation elements 20 for moving the moving contact 15 are also placed inside the disconnection chamber 5. The disconnection chamber 5 is furthermore separated from the insulating bushing 4 and from the disconnection chamber 6 by means of the insulating partitions 21 and 22.
The interruption chamber 6 contains a moving contact 23 and a fixed contact 24. The moving contact 23 is actuated by movement elements 25. Further, the earthing device 12 is connected to the interruption chamber 6 and places the conductor 26 in output from the disconnection chamber at ground potential. The moving contact 23 is connected to the conductor 10 in output from the interruption and disconnecting device 1. The interruption chamber 6 is separated from the insulating bushing 9 by means of the insulating partition 28. The insulating bushings 4 and 9, the interruption chamber 6 and the disconnection chamber 5 are completely filled with an insulating fluid, generally sulfur hexafluoride (SF6), having a pressure which is higher than the
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atmospheric one. In order to maintain said internal pressure, required in order to achieve reduced insulation distances and therefore reduce the dimensions of the structure, the device 1 is completely sealed with respect to the outside environment.
Alternative configurations with respect to the one described in figures 1 and 2 are possible. In particular, it is possible to use multiple disconnection chambers and multiple insulating bushings if it is necessary to connect multiple distribution bars to the main power line.
In the interruption and disconnecting devices of the art, the insulation fluid that is generally used is sulfur hexafluoride (SF6). Other known fluids are fluorocarbons (FC), perfluorocarbons (PFC), perfluoropolyethers (PFPE) or mixtures thereof.
The use of these insulation means, particularly SF6, which has the highest dielectric insulation capacity, allows to considerably reduce the insulation distances and therefore to considerably reduce the dimensions of each single device, and therefore of the substation in which it is used, with respect to the use of insulating means, such as mineral oils. This fact leads to a considerable reduction in installation and operating costs.
It is known from the technical literature that known fluoridized gaseous insulating means, in particular SF6, may cause problems in terms of environmental impact; furthermore they are considerably expensive. Reducing the content of these insulating means by using alternative dielectric fluids, such as for example mixtures of SF6 and nitrogen (N2), pure nitrogen or noble gases, leads to an increase in the required insulation distances, since said : alternative fluids have, for an equal pressure, a much lower dielectric strength and arch quenching power than, for example, SF6 used in its pure state.


Simple replacement of SF6 with other alternative insulation fluids without
performing any structural modification to the interruption and disconnecting
device would cause malfunctions.
On the other hand, if the pressure of said alternative insulating fluids is
increased so as to ensure satisfactory dielectric strength and arc quenching
power, it is necessary to resort to complicated structures which are
economically scarcely competitive and scarcely reliable.
The aim of the present invention is to provide an interruption and disconnecting
device for high- and/or medium-voltage applications, whose structure has a
reduced complexity and is capable of optimizing the use of the insulation means
used, so as to considerably reduce their environmental impact.
Within the scope of this aim, an object of the present invention is to provide an
interruption and disconnecting device for high- and/or medium-voltage
applications, which has a modular structure which allows to partition the
volume of the insulating fluids used inside the interruption pole.
Another object of the present invention is to provide an interruption and
disconnecting device for high- and/or medium-voltage applications, in which it
is possible to use different insulation means inside the interruption pole.
Another object of the present invention is to provide an interruption and
disconnecting device for high- and/or medium-voltage applications, which
allows easy maintenance and/or replacement of the electric actuation elements,
particularly of the parts that are most exposed to wear, such as the fixed contact
and the moving contact of the interruption chamber.
Another, but not last, object of the present invention is to provide an
interruption and disconnecting device for high- and/or medium-voltage
applications, which is highly reliable and relatively easy to manufacture and at
competitive costs.


This aim, these and other objects, which will become more apparent hereinafter, are achieved by an interruption and disconnecting device for high- and/or medium-voltage applications, comprising a disconnection chamber and an interruption pole having a free volume accomodating an interruption chamber which contains a moving contact and a fixed contact, said interruption pole and said disconnection chamber containing dielectrically insulating fluids. The device according to the invention is characterized in that said interruption chamber is sealed.
In this way, the device according to the invention has a modular structure which allows to optimize the use of dielectric fluids and to reduce the environmental impact; in fact, the dielectric fluids which have a high environmental impact are used only in the sealed interruption chamber where a high arc quenching power is required.
Another advantage of the device according to the invention, consists in the fact that the interruption chamber can be extracted from the main body of the electric interruption pole. This allows easy maintenance and/or replacement of the parts most subject to wear during the interruption and disconnection actuations by virtue of the possibility to extract the sealed interruption chamber from the body of the electric pole. Furthermore, the device according to the invention is constituted by a relatively small number of parts and ensures high reliability and easy execution.
Further characteristics and advantages of the invention will become more apparent from the description of some preferred but not exclusive embodiments of an interruption and disconnecting device according to the invention, illustrated by way of non-limitative example in the accompanying drawings, wherein:


figure 1 is a block diagram of an example of a known interruption and
disconnecting device for high-voltage applications;
figure 2 is a schematic example of embodiment of an interruption and
disconnecting device for high-voltage applications;
figure 3 is a preferred but not exclusive embodiment of an interruption and
disconnecting device according to the present invention; and
figure 4 illustrates schematically an alternative embodiment of an interruption
and disconnecting device according to the present invention.
As illustrated in figure 3, the interruption and disconnecting device according to
the invention comprises an input insulating bushing 51 which is electrically
connected to a main power line 50. A transformer 53 is generally placed at the
base of the insulating bushing 51 in order to measure the current in input to the
device. The insulating bushing 51 is connected to an intermediate chamber 55
and is insulated from it by means of the partition 56.
The intermediate chamber 55 and the insulating bushing 51 are filled with a
dielectric fluid having a very low environmental impact, or even non-impact at
all. for example a gaseous mixture of sulfur exafluoride and nitrogen (SF6+N2),
or pure nitrogen gas (N2), or air.
The intermediate chamber 55 is connected to an interruption pole 54 and is
insulated from it by means of the partition 57; in its turn, the interruption pole
54 is structurally connected to a disconnection chamber 67 by means of the
partition 73. The interruption pole 54 has a free volume, delimited by its casing
200 and the partitions 73 and 57, which accomodates an interruption chamber
63.
Said interruption chamber 63 contains interruption mechanisms which comprise
at least a fixed contact 64 and at least a moving contact 59. The moving contact
59 is rigidly coupled to a guiding rod 61 which is moved by an actuation system


62, for example of the linking rod-crank type; the fixed contact 64 is connected to the disconnection chamber 67 by means of a sealed connection 66. As illustrated, the actuation system 62, the guiding rod 61 of the moving contact, the moving contact 59 and the fixed contact 64 are arranged inside the casing of the interruption chamber 63; said casing of the chamber 63 can be made of insulating material, for example fiberglass-reinforced plastic, at least in the part that surrounds the moving contact 59, the fixed contact 64 and the rod 62. Field shields 68 and 69 are positioned around the casing of the interruption chamber 63; alternatively, the casing of the interruption chamber 63 can be used in its end part as field shield, without having to use the field shield 69 and the closure flange 72.
The interruption chamber 63 is hermetically closed, in one end portion, by a flange 72 and is connected, at the opposite end, to the casing of the interruption pole 54 by means of the sealing flange 65; the casing of the interruption pole 54 can be made, for example, of conducting plastic.
In this way, the interruption chamber 63 is advantageously sealed with respect to the remaining parts of the interruption pole 54. As a consequence, the interruption chamber 63 can be filled with a highly dielectric fluoridized fluid, preferably sulfur exafluoride (SF6), by means of the valve 71, while the interruption pole 54 is filled by means of the valve 74, in the part of the free volume that is not occupied by the chamber 63, with a different dielectric fluid, such as for example a gaseous mixture of sulfuf exafluoride ind nitrogen (SF(,+N2), or pure nitrogen gas (N2), or air. Alternatively, the interruption chamber 63 can be filled with a dielectric fluoridized fluid chosen among the group constituted by perfluoropolyethers (PFPE), or perfluorocarbons (PFC), or fluorocarbons (FC).


This solution is particularly advantageous in that it allows to segregate the insulation means which have a high arc quenching power, but a high environmental impact as well, only where it is strictly necessary, that is to say, inside the casing of the interruption chamber 63 at the moving contact and at the fixed contact. In this manner the volume of potentially polluting means used in the device is minimized.
Furthermore, their segregation inside the sealed chamber 63 allows adequate control and prevents their dispersion into the atmosphere. In fact, the intermediate chamber 55 comprises a first portion of a piston-operated protection system 58 which interrupts the electrical connection to the main power line if a pressure loss of the dielectric fluid used in the interruption pole 54 occurs. A second portion of the piston-operated protection system 58 is positioned inside the interruption pole 54 and is connected to the moving contact 59 of the interruption chamber 63 by means of a sealed connection 60. According to an alternative embodiment, the conductor 50 of the insulating bushing 51 can be directly connected to the interruption chamber 63. A further advantage resides in the fact that, by acting on the connections 60 and 66 and on the flange 65, the interruption chamber 63 can be extracted from the interruption pole 54 by acting in the direction of the arrow 70. This solution is advantageous in that it allows to fully replace the chamber 63 if the parts subjected to the most intense wear, that is to say, the moving contact 59 and the fixed contact 64, are damaged, considerably facilitating maintenance of the device.
The disconnection chamber 67 contains a moving contact 75 which, by means of a movement system 76, for example of the rack type, can be connected to a first fixed contact 77 or to a second fixed contact 78. The first fixed contact 77 connects the moving contact 75 to the output insulating bushing 80, while the


second fixed contact 78 connects the moving contact 75 to the outer casing 79 of the disconnector chamber 67, which is at ground potential. The actuation system 76 is actuated by an actuator 81, for example an electric motor. The insulating bushing 80 is separated from the disconnection chamber 67 by means of a partition 82; a transformer 83 is generally placed at the base of the through conductor 80 and measures the current in output from the device. The disconnection chamber 67 and the insulating bushing 80 are filled with a dielectric fluid having a very low environmental impact, -or even non-impact at all, such as for example a gaseous mixture of sulfur exafluoride and nitrogen (SFf,+N2), or pure nitrogen gas (N2), or air.
The interruption and disconnecting device according to the invention is particularly suitable for use in high- and/or medium-voltage substations for distributing and transmitting electric power. Accordingly, the present invention also relates to a high- and/or medium-voltage substation for distributing and transmitting electric power, characterised in that it comprises an interruption and disconnecting device according to the invention.
With reference to figure 4, an alternative embodiment of the device according to the invention is schematically illustrated by indicating only the path of the current. In particular, the embodiment of figure 4 foresees the use of an interruption pole 89, a sealed interruption chamber 90 and three insulating bushings 91, 92 and 93.
The interruption chamber 90 is preferably filled with sulfur exafluonde SF(„ while the remaining volume of the interruption and disconnecting device is filled with insulating means having a very low environmental impact, or even non-impact at all, such as for example a mixture of sulfur exafluoride and nitrogen (SF6+N2), or pure nitrogen gas (N2), or air. As regards the constructive details, reference can be made for example to figure 3. This embodiment is


advantageous in that it allows to connect the device to multiple secondary distribution bars for example in a substation.
In practice, it has been found that the device according to the invention fully achieves the intended aim, since, thanks to the modularity of its structure, it is • possible to minimize the pollution potential of the interruption and disconnecting device by segregating the insulating means which have a high environmental impact only at the parts that require a higher arc quenching power.
The device thus conceived is susceptible of modifications and variations, all of which are within the scope of the inventive concept; for example, it is possible to use multiple interruption chambers. In any case, however, the advantages encountered in the above described embodiments of the invention are maintained.
All the details may furthermore be replaced with technically equivalent elements. In practice, the considered circuit configurations, so long as they are compatible with the specific use, as well as the single components, may be any according to requirements and the state of the art.

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WE CLAIM:
1. An interruption and disconnecting device for high-and/or medium-voltage applications, comprising a disconnection chamber (67) and an interruption pole (54) having a casing (200) which delimits a free volume accommodating an interruption chamber (63) which contains a moving contact (59) and a fixed contact (64), said interruption pole (54) and said disconnection chamber (67) containing dielectrically insulating fluids, characterized in that said interruption chamber (63) is sealed with respect to the remaining part of the said interruption pole (54).
2. An interruption and disconnecting device as claimed in claim 1, wherein said sealed interruption chamber (63) and the free volume of the interruption pole (54) that is not occupied by the interruption chamber (63) contain a first dielectric fluid and a second dielectric fluid, respectively, said first and second dielectric fluids being different to each other.
3. An interruption and disconnecting device as claimed in claim 2, wherein said first dielectric fluid comprises a dielectric fluoridized fluid.
4. An interruption and disconnecting device as claimed in claim 3, wherein said dielectric fluoridized fluid is sulfur hexafluoride.
5. An interruption and disconnecting device as claimed in claim 3, wherein said dielectric fluoridized fluid is chosen among the group constituted by perfluorocarbons, or fluorocarbons or perfluoropolyethers.
6. An interruption and disconnecting device as claimed in one or more of the preceding claims, wherein said dielectric fluid comprises a mixture of sulfur hexafluoride and nitrogen.


7. An interruption and disconnecting device as claimed in one or more of
claims from 2 to 5, wherein said second dielectric fluid comprises pure
nitrogen gas.
8. An interruption and disconnecting device as claimed in one or more of claims
from 2 to 5, wherein said second dielectric fluid comprises air.
9. An interruption and disconnecting device as claimed in one or more of the
preceding claims, wherein the casing of the interruption chamber (63) also
acts as an electric field shield.
10. An interruption and disconnecting device as claimed in one or more of the preceding claims, wherein the casing of said interruption chamber (63) is at least partly made of an insulating material.
11. An interruption and disconnecting device as claimed in to one or more of the preceding claims, wherein said sealed interruption chamber (63) can be extracted with respect to the body of the interruption pole (54).
Dated this 9th day of April 2001
(RANJNA MEHTA DUTT] OF REMFRY & SAGAR ATTORNEY FOR THE APPLICANTS

Documents:

abstract1.jpg

in-pct-2001-00371-mum-assignment(27-06-2005).pdf

in-pct-2001-00371-mum-cancelled pages(27-06-2005).pdf

in-pct-2001-00371-mum-claims(granted)-(27-06-2005).doc

in-pct-2001-00371-mum-claims(granted)-(27-06-2005).pdf

in-pct-2001-00371-mum-correspondence(28-03-2006).pdf

in-pct-2001-00371-mum-correspondence(ipo)-(01-12-2006).pdf

in-pct-2001-00371-mum-drawing(27-06-2005).pdf

in-pct-2001-00371-mum-form 1(09-04-2001).pdf

in-pct-2001-00371-mum-form 19(27-04-2004).pdf

in-pct-2001-00371-mum-form 1a(27-06-2005).pdf

in-pct-2001-00371-mum-form 2(granted)-(27-06-2005).doc

in-pct-2001-00371-mum-form 2(granted)-(27-06-2005).pdf

in-pct-2001-00371-mum-form 3(09-04-2001).pdf

in-pct-2001-00371-mum-form 3(27-06-2005).pdf

in-pct-2001-00371-mum-form 5(09-04-2001).pdf

in-pct-2001-00371-mum-form 6(27-06-2005).pdf

in-pct-2001-00371-mum-form-pct-ipea-409(10-04-2001).pdf

in-pct-2001-00371-mum-form-pct-isa-210(10-04-2001).pdf

in-pct-2001-00371-mum-petition under rule 137(27-06-2005).pdf

in-pct-2001-00371-mum-petition under rule 138(27-06-2005).pdf

in-pct-2001-00371-mum-power of authority(27-06-2005).pdf


Patent Number 203110
Indian Patent Application Number IN/PCT/2001/00371/MUM
PG Journal Number 15/2007
Publication Date 13-Apr-2007
Grant Date 01-Dec-2006
Date of Filing 09-Apr-2001
Name of Patentee ABB POWER TECHNOLOGIES S. P. A.
Applicant Address PIAZZALE LODI, 3, I-20137 MILANO, ITALY.
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 PIAZZA COSTANTE VIA MARZAGALLI 18, I-26900 LODI, ITALY.
PCT International Classification Number N/A
PCT International Application Number PCT/EP99/07001
PCT International Filing date 1999-09-15
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 MI98A002022 1998-09-17 Italy