Short Circuit & Relay Coordination Study – 33 kV Industrial Network | Power Projects
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Case Study

Short Circuit & Relay Coordination Study for 33 kV Industrial Network

Ensuring reliable fault protection for industrial power systems through detailed fault analysis, relay grading, and protection selectivity validation prior to commissioning.

33 kV
Primary Network
DIgSILENT
Simulation Platform
7.5 MVA
Transformer Capacity
Industrial
Sector

Project Overview

Power Projects was engaged to perform a Short Circuit Study and Relay Coordination Study for a 33 kV industrial electrical network prior to system commissioning. The study focused on validating network behaviour under fault conditions and ensuring the protection system operates selectively, reliably and safely during abnormal system events.


In industrial power systems, protection performance plays a critical role in maintaining operational continuity. A single protection maloperation can lead to unnecessary feeder outages, extended downtime and, in severe cases, complete plant shutdown. The study was therefore undertaken to support safe energisation, improve system reliability and minimise operational risk.


The electrical system consisted of a medium-voltage distribution network supplying multiple downstream loads across different voltage levels. The study was carried out using DIgSILENT PowerFactory for detailed network modelling, fault simulations and protection coordination analysis.

33 kV primary distribution system
7.5 MVA, 33/11 kV transformer
11 kV downstream distribution
415 V downstream distribution
Multiple feeders and LV load groups

For modelling efficiency, low-voltage switchboards and downstream 415 V loads were represented using aggregated load models while maintaining sufficient accuracy for system-level studies.


Study Objectives

The overall protection philosophy was designed to ensure that only the faulted section of the system is isolated while maintaining continuity of supply to the remaining network.

Validate short circuit levels across the network

Verify equipment withstand capability under fault conditions

Develop coordinated relay settings

Ensure selective fault isolation

Prevent unnecessary tripping of healthy feeders

Support stable and reliable plant operation during disturbances

Engineering Challenges

Managing Protection Selectivity

Maintaining proper coordination between upstream and downstream protection devices. Without appropriate grading and selectivity:

  • Multiple breakers may operate for a single downstream fault
  • Healthy feeders may trip unnecessarily
  • Plant-wide outages can occur
  • Restart and recovery time may increase significantly

Accurate Fault Level Assessment

Fault current levels are influenced by source strength, transformer impedance, network topology, and operating configuration. Incorrect assumptions during modelling can lead to:

  • Inaccurate relay settings
  • Equipment under-rating
  • Unreliable protection performance

Limited Input Data & Network Representation

As commonly encountered in industrial projects, portions of the input data required validation and interpretation. This included:

  • Verification of transformer and feeder data
  • Appropriate representation of aggregated LV loads
  • Validation of operating assumptions before simulation

Balancing Sensitivity and Stability

Protection systems must respond rapidly to faults while avoiding unnecessary operation. Achieving the correct balance between:

  • Fast fault detection
  • Grading margins
  • Selective tripping

Technical Approach

System Modelling

A detailed network model developed in DIgSILENT PowerFactory using:

  • Source parameters
  • Transformer characteristics
  • Feeder configurations
  • Load representation

Short Circuit Simulations

Comprehensive fault studies across the network covering:

  • Three-phase faults
  • Line-to-line faults
  • Single line-to-ground faults
  • Fault current magnitudes at each bus
  • Source contribution assessment
  • Critical fault location identification

Relay Coordination Study

Detailed review of relay operating characteristics and grading:

  • Relay pickup setting development
  • Time-current curve coordination
  • Grading margin verification
  • Backup protection assessment
  • Selective isolation verification

Validation of System Behaviour

Multiple fault scenarios simulated to verify:

  • Selective tripping performance
  • Absence of overlapping relay operating regions
  • Stable system behaviour during fault events

Key Outcomes

The study delivered several important technical and operational improvements across the network.

Engineering Outcomes

Accurate short circuit level assessment across all voltage levels

Coordinated relay settings with selective operation philosophy

Identification and mitigation of potential protection miscoordination issues

Improved backup protection performance

Enhanced discrimination between upstream and downstream feeders

Operational Benefits

Reduced risk of plant-wide outages

Improved commissioning readiness

Reliable fault clearing capability

Stable system operation during disturbances

Minimised potential rework and operational delays during commissioning

Project Delivery

The study was completed within the committed project schedule following receipt of final input data.

On Schedule
Delivery
Completed within the committed project schedule from data receipt through final report submission.
01
Data review and validation
02
System modelling
03
Short circuit analysis
04
Relay coordination
05
Technical review
06
Final report submission

Protection Studies for Reliable Industrial Operations

Short circuit and relay coordination studies are fundamental to the safe and reliable operation of industrial power systems. For utilities, EPC contractors and industrial operators, protection studies are not simply about relay settings — they are about ensuring the electrical system responds correctly when abnormal conditions occur, protecting equipment, maintaining operational continuity, and reducing overall system risk.

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