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EnergyVille/KU Leuven tests Mitsubishi Electric HVDC Line Protection Relay for Power Systems of the Future

Mitsubishi Electric recently visited EnergyVille, a collaboration between the Flemish research partners KU Leuven, VITO, imec and UHasselt, to install a prototype of their HVDC line protection relay hardware – a new technology to protect power systems of the future.

To enable the connection of large amounts of renewable energy, future power systems require flexible bulk power transfer beyond existing capabilities. The most effective way to provide this additional capacity is through the use of High Voltage DC (HVDC) networks. Protection of such networks, however, requires novel equipment and algorithms to identify and clear faults from the system in a fast and selective way so that damage to equipment or extended loss of service are avoided. The HVDC relay is a piece of hardware that executes algorithms to detect and identify faults, and provides critical signals to other protection equipment. State-of-the-art line protection algorithms developed by EnergyVille/KU Leuven are included in the Mitsubishi Electric device to quickly identify short circuit faults and trigger protection devices. 

“The opportunity to perform testing of our hardware in the EnergyVille lab brings the reality of multiterminal HVDC protection – the aim of the PROMOTioN project – one step closer”, says Mr. Kenichi Kuroda, senior manager at Mitsubishi Electric Corporation Japan. “Through collaborative working with EnergyVille/KU Leuven during this testing phase, we hope to improve and optimise protection methods and algorithms for HVDC, as well as provide the first independent testing demonstrations.” 

“The arrival of the Mitsubishi Electric HVDC relay in the EnergyVille lab marks the first time an industrial HVDC relay is tested in an independent test lab,” Dirk Van Hertem, professor at EnergyVille/KU Leuven explains. “Such testing is crucial to begin discussions on requirements and standards for HVDC relays, which will be increasingly important as HVDC installations move towards large-scale multi-terminal and multi-vendor solutions. Through fruitful collaboration with Mitsubishi Electric we are proud to be able to work towards industrialisation of our protection algorithms”.