
Transmission lines
Electric power transmission is the bulk transfer
of electrical energy, a process in the delivery of
electricity to consumers. A power transmission
network typically connects
power plants to multiple
substations near a populated area. The
wiring from substations to customers is referred to as
electricity distribution, following
the historic business model separating the
wholesale electricity transmission business from
distributors who deliver the
electricity to the homes. Electric power transmission allows
distant energy sources (such as
hydroelectric power plants) to be connected to
consumers in population centers, and may allow exploitation of
low-grade fuel resources such as coal that would otherwise be too
costly to transport to generating facilities.
Usually transmission lines use
three phase alternating
current (AC).
Single phase AC current is
sometimes used in a
railway electrification
system.
High-voltage
direct current systems are used for long distance transmission,
or some undersea cables, or for connecting two different AC
networks.
Electricity is transmitted at high voltages (110 kV or above)
to reduce the energy lost in transmission. Power is usually
transmitted as
alternating
current through
overhead power
lines. Underground power transmission has a higher direct cost
but is useful in densely-built-up areas where it requires less land
area.
A power transmission
network is
referred to as a
grid. Multiple
redundant lines between points on
the network are provided so that power can be routed from any power
plant to any load center, through a variety of routes, based on the
economics of the transmission path and the cost of power. Much
analysis is done by transmission companies to determine the maximum
reliable capacity of each line, which, due to system stability
considerations, may be less than the physical or thermal limit of
the line.
Deregulation of electricity
companies in many countries has led to renewed interest in reliable
economic design of transmission networks. However, in some places
the gaming of a deregulated energy system has led to disaster, such
as that which occurred during the
California electricity crisis
of 2000 and 2001.

Diagram of an electrical system.
Overhead transmission
Overhead conductors are not covered by insulation. The conductor
material is nearly always an aluminium alloy, made into several
strands and possibly reinforced with steel strands. Copper was
sometimes used for overhead transmission but aluminium is lower in
weight for equivalent performance, and much lower in cost. Overhead
conductors are a commodity supplied by several companies worldwide.
Improved conductor material and shapes are regularly used to allow
increased capacity and modernize transmission circuits. Conductor
sizes range from 12 mm
2 (#6
American wire gauge) to
750 mm
2 (1,590,000 circular mils area), with
varying resistance and
current-carrying capacity. Thicker
wires would lead to a relatively small increase in capacity due to
the
skin effect, that causes most of the
current to flow close to the surface of the wire.

Contiguous United States power
transmission grid consists of 300,000 km of lines operated by
500 companies.
Today, transmission-level voltages are usually considered to be 110
kV and above. Lower voltages such as 66 kV and 33 kV are
usually considered sub-transmission voltages but are occasionally
used on long lines with light loads. Voltages less than 33 kV are
usually used for
distribution. Voltages above
230 kV are considered
extra high voltage and require
different designs compared to equipment used at lower
voltages.
Since overhead transmission lines are uninsulated, design of these
lines requires minimum clearances to be observed to maintain
safety. Adverse weather conditions of high wind and low
temperatures can lead to power outages: wind speeds as low as can
permit conductors to encroach operating clearances, resulting in a
flashover and loss of supply.Oscillatory
motion of the physical line can be termed
gallop or
flutter depending on the frequency and
amplitude of oscillation.
Underground transmission
Electric power can also be transmitted by
underground power cables instead of
overhead power lines. They can assist the transmission of power
across:
- Densely populated urban areas
- Areas where land is unavailable or planning consent is
difficult
- Rivers and other natural obstacles
- Land with outstanding natural or environmental heritage
- Areas of significant or prestigious infrastructural
development
- Land whose value must be maintained for future urban expansion
and rural development
Some other advantages of underground power cables:
- Less subject to damage from severe weather conditions (mainly
lightning, wind and freezing)
- Greatly reduced emission, into the surrounding area, of
electromagnetic fields (EMF). All electric currents generate EMF,
but the shielding provided by the earth surrounding underground
cables restricts their range and power. See section below,
health concerns.
- Underground cables need a narrower surrounding strip of about
1–10 meters to install, whereas an overhead line requires a
surrounding strip of about 20–200 meters wide to be kept
permanently clear for safety, maintenance and repair.
- Underground cables pose no hazard to low flying aircraft or to
wildlife, and are significantly safer as they pose no shock hazard
(except to the unwary digger).
Some disadvantages of underground power cables:
- Undergrounding is more expensive, since the cost of burying
cables at transmission voltages is several times greater than
overhead power lines, and the life-cycle cost of an underground
power cable is two to four times the cost of an overhead power
line. According to the British Stakeholder Advisory Group on ELF
EMFs, the cost is around GBP£10/km, compared to GBP£0.5-1/km for
overhead lines. This is mainly due to the limit of the physical
properties of the insulation placed during installation, keeping
the runs to hundreds of meters between splices, which are most
commonly placed in manholes or splice-boxes for repairs.
- Whereas finding and repairing overhead wire breaks can be
accomplished in hours, underground repairs can take days or weeks,
and for this reason redundant lines are run.
- Operations are more difficult since the high reactive power of underground cables produces
large charging currents and so makes voltage control more
difficult.
The advantages can in some cases outweigh the disadvantages of the
higher investment cost, and more expensive maintenance and
management.
Most
high voltage cables for
power transmission that are currently sold on the market are
insulated by a sheath of cross-linked
polyethylene (XLPE). Some cable may have a lead
or aluminium jacket in conjunction with XLPE insulation to allow
for fiber optics to be seamlessly integrated within the cable.
Before 1960, underground power cables were insulated with oil and
paper and ran in a rigid steel pipe, or a semi-rigid aluminium or
lead jacket or sheath. The oil was kept under pressure to prevent
formation of voids that would allow
partial discharges within the cable
insulation. There are still many of these oil-and-paper insulated
cables in use worldwide. Between 1960 and 1990, polymers became
more widely used at distribution voltages, mostly
EPDM (ethylene propylene diene M-class); however, their
relative unreliability, particularly early XLPE, resulted in a slow
uptake at transmission voltages. While cables of 330 kV are
commonly constructed using XLPE, this has occurred only in recent
decades.
History

New York City streets in 1890.
Besides telegraph lines, multiple electric lines were required
for each class of device requiring different voltages.
In the early days of commercial use of electric power, transmission
of electric power at the same voltage as used by lighting and
mechanical loads restricted the distance between generating plant
and consumers. In 1882, generation was with
direct current, which could not easily be
increased in voltage for long-distance transmission. Different
classes of loads (for example, lighting, fixed motors, and
traction/railway systems) required different voltages, and so used
different generators and circuits.
Due to this specialization of lines and because transmission was so
inefficient that generators needed to be close by their loads, it
seemed at the time that the industry would develop into what is now
known as a
distributed
generation system with large numbers of small generators
located nearby their loads.
In 1886 in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, a 1 kV AC
distribution system was installed. That same year, AC power at
2 kV, transmitted 30 km, was installed at Cerchi, Italy.
At an
AIEE meeting on May 16, 1888,
Nikola Tesla delivered a lecture entitled
A New System of Alternating Current Motors and
Transformers, describing the equipment which allowed
efficient generation and use of
polyphase alternating currents. The transformer,
and Tesla's polyphase and single-phase induction motors, were
essential for a combined AC distribution system for both lighting
and machinery. Ownership of the rights to the Tesla patents was a
key commercial advantage to the
Westinghouse Company in
offering a complete alternating current power system for both
lighting and power.
as one of the most influential innovations for the use of
electricity, the
universal system used
transformers to step-up voltage from generators
to high-voltage transmission lines, and then to step-down voltage
to local distribution circuits or industrial customers. By a
suitable choice of
utility
frequency, both lighting and motor loads could be served.
Rotary converters and later
mercury-arc valves and other
rectifier equipment allowed DC load to be served by local
conversion where needed. Even generating stations and loads using
different frequencies could be interconnected using rotary
converters. By using common generating plants for every type of
load, important
economies of scale
were achieved, lower overall capital investment was required,
load factor on each plant was increased
allowing for higher efficiency, a lower cost for the consumer and
increased overall use of electric power.
By allowing multiple generating plants to be interconnected over a
wide area, electricity production cost was reduced. The most
efficient available plants could be used to supply the varying
loads during the day. Reliability was improved and capital
investment cost was reduced, since stand-by generating capacity
could be shared over many more customers and a wider geographic
area. Remote and low-cost sources of energy, such as
hydroelectric power or mine-mouth coal, could
be exploited to lower energy production cost.
The first
transmission of three-phase alternating current using high voltage
took place in 1891 during the international
electricity exhibition in Frankfurt
. A 25 kV transmission line,
approximately 175 km long, connected
Lauffen on the Neckar and
Frankfurt.
Voltages used for electric power transmission increased throughout
the 20th century. By 1914, fifty-five transmission systems each
operating at more than 70 kV were in service. The highest
voltage then used was 150 kV.
The rapid industrialization in the 20th century made electrical
transmission lines and grids a critical part of the economic
infrastructure in most industrialized nations. Interconnection of
local generation plants and small distribution networks was greatly
spurred by the requirements of
World War
I, where large electrical generating plants were built by
governments to provide power to munitions factories; later these
plants were connected to supply civil load through long-distance
transmission.
Bulk power transmission
Engineers design transmission networks to transport the energy as
efficiently as feasible, while at the same time taking into account
economic factors, network safety and redundancy. These networks use
components such as power lines, cables,
circuit breakers, switches and
transformers.
Transmission efficiency is improved by increasing the voltage using
a step-up
transformer, which reduces the
current in the conductors, while keeping the power transmitted
nearly equal to the power input. The reduced current flowing
through the conductor reduces the losses in the conductor and
since, according to
Joule's Law, the
losses are proportional to the square of the current. Halving the
current makes the transmission loss one quarter the original
value.
A transmission grid is a network of
power
stations,
transmission
circuits, and substations. Energy is usually transmitted within
the grid with
three-phase AC.
DC systems
require relatively costly conversion equipment which may be
economically justified for particular projects. Single phase AC is
used only for distribution to end users since it is not usable for
large polyphase
induction motors. In
the 19th century, two-phase transmission was used but required
either three wires with unequal currents or four wires. Higher
order phase systems require more than three wires, but deliver
marginal benefits.
The capital cost of electric power stations is so high, and
electric demand is so variable, that it is often cheaper to import
some portion of the needed power than to generate it locally.
Because nearby loads are often correlated (hot weather in the
Southwest portion of the United States might cause many people
there to turn on their air conditioners), electricity must often
come from distant sources. Because of the economics of load
balancing,
wide area
transmission grids now span across countries and even large
portions of continents. The web of interconnections between power
producers and consumers ensures that power can flow, even if a few
links are inoperative.
The unvarying (or slowly varying over many hours) portion of the
electric demand is known as the
base load and is generally served
best by large facilities (which are therefore efficient due to
economies of scale) with low variable costs for fuel and
operations. Such facilities might be nuclear or coal-fired power
stations, or hydroelectric, while other renewable energy sources
such as
concentrated solar
thermal and
geothermal power
have the potential to provide base load power. Renewable energy
sources such as solar photovoltaics, wind, wave, and tidal are, due
to their intermittency, not considered "base load" but can still
add power to the grid. The remaining power demand, if any, is
supplied by
peaking power
plants, which are typically smaller, faster-responding, and
higher cost sources, such as combined cycle or combustion turbine
plants fueled by natural gas.

A high-power electrical transmission
tower.
Long-distance transmission of electricity (thousands of kilometers)
is cheap and efficient, with costs of US$0.005–0.02/kWh (compared
to annual averaged large producer costs of US$0.01–0.025/kWh,
retail rates upwards of US$0.10/kWh, and multiples of retail for
instantaneous suppliers at unpredicted highest demand moments).
Thus distant suppliers can be cheaper than local sources (e.g., New
York City buys a lot of electricity from Canada). Multiple
local sources (even if more expensive and
infrequently used) can make the transmission grid more fault
tolerant to weather and other disasters that can disconnect distant
suppliers.
Long distance transmission allows remote renewable energy resources
to be used to displace fossil fuel consumption. Hydro and wind
sources can't be moved closer to populous cities, and solar costs
are lowest in remote areas where local power needs are minimal.
Connection costs alone can determine whether any particular
renewable alternative is economically sensible. Costs can be
prohibitive for transmission lines, but various proposals for
massive infrastructure investment in high capacity, very long
distance
super grid transmission networks
could be recovered with modest usage fees.
Grid input
At the generating plants the energy is
produced at a relatively low voltage
between about 2.3 kV and 30 kV, depending on the size of
the unit. The generator terminal voltage is then stepped up by the
power station
transformer to a higher
voltage (115 kV to 765 kV AC,
varying by country) for transmission over long distances.
Losses
Transmitting electricity at high voltage reduces the fraction of
energy lost to
resistance. For a given
amount of power, a higher voltage reduces the current and thus the
resistive losses in the conductor.
For example, raising the voltage by a factor of 10 reduces the
current by a corresponding factor of 10 and therefore the
\scriptstyle I^2R\,\! losses by a factor of 100, provided the same
sized conductors are used in both cases. Even if the conductor size
(cross-sectional area) is reduced 10-fold to match the lower
current the \scriptstyle I^2R\,\! losses are still reduced 10-fold.
Long distance transmission is typically done with overhead lines at
voltages of 115 to 1,200 kV. At extremely high voltages, more
than 2 MV between conductor and ground,
corona discharge losses are so large that
they can offset the lower resistance loss in the line
conductors.
Transmission and distribution losses in the USA were estimated at
7.2% in 1995
As of 1980, the longest cost-effective distance for electricity was
, although all present transmission lines are considerably
shorter.
In an alternating current circuit, the
inductance and
capacitance of the phase conductors can be
significant. The currents that flow in these components of the
circuit
impedance constitute
reactive power, which transmits no
energy to the load. Reactive current flow causes extra losses in
the transmission circuit. The ratio of real power (transmitted to
the load) to apparent power is the
power
factor. As reactive current increases, the reactive power
increases and the power factor decreases. For systems with low
power factors, losses are higher than for systems with high power
factors. Utilities add capacitor banks and other components (such
as
phase-shifting
transformers;
static VAR
compensators; physical transposition of the phase conductors;
and
flexible AC
transmission systems, FACTS) throughout the system to control
reactive power flow for reduction of losses and stabilization of
system voltage.
Transmission grid exit
At the
substations,
transformers reduce the voltage to a lower level for
distribution to commercial and
residential users. This distribution is accomplished with a
combination of sub-transmission (33 kV to 115 kV, varying by
country and customer requirements) and distribution (3.3 to
25 kV). Finally, at the point of use, the energy is
transformed to low voltage (100 to 600 V, varying by country
and customer requirements—see
mains
power systems).
High-voltage direct current
High voltage direct current (HVDC) is used to transmit large
amounts of power over long distances or for interconnections
between asynchronous grids. When electrical energy is required to
be transmitted over very long distances, it is more economical to
transmit using
direct current instead
of
alternating current. For a
long transmission line, the lower losses and reduced construction
cost of a DC line can offset the additional cost of converter
stations at each end. Also, at high AC voltages, significant
(although economically acceptable) amounts of energy are lost due
to
corona discharge, the
capacitance between phases or, in the case of
buried cables, between phases and the
soil or
water in which the cable is buried.
HVDC is also used for long submarine cables
because over about 30 km length AC can no longer be applied. In
that case special
high voltage
cables for DC are built. Many
submarine cable connections - up to 600 km length
- are in use nowadays.
HVDC links are sometimes used to stabilize against control problems
with the AC electricity flow.
In other words, to transmit AC power as AC
when needed in either direction between Seattle
and Boston
would
require the (highly challenging) continuous real-time adjustment of
the relative phase of the two
electrical grids. With HVDC instead the interconnection
would: (1) Convert AC in Seattle into HVDC. (2) Use HVDC for the
three thousand miles of cross country transmission. Then (3)
convert the HVDC to locally synchronized AC in Boston, and
optionally in other cooperating cities along the transmission
route.
One
prominent example of such a transmission line is the Pacific DC
Intertie
located in the Western United States
.
Limitations
The amount of power that can be sent over a transmission line is
limited. The origins of the limits vary depending on the length of
the line. For a short line, the heating of conductors due to line
losses sets a thermal limit. If too much current is drawn,
conductors may sag too close to the ground, or conductors and
equipment may be damaged by overheating. For intermediate-length
lines on the order of , the limit is set by the
voltage drop in the line. For longer AC lines,
system stability sets
the limit to the power that can be transferred. Approximately, the
power flowing over an AC line is proportional to the sine of the
phase angle of the voltage at the receiving and transmitting ends.
Since this angle varies depending on system loading and generation,
it is undesirable for the angle to approach 90 degrees. Very
approximately, the allowable product of line length and maximum
load is proportional to the square of the system voltage. Series
capacitors or phase-shifting transformers are used on long lines to
improve stability.
High-voltage direct current
lines are restricted only by thermal and voltage drop limits, since
the phase angle is not material to their operation.
Up to now, it has been almost impossible to foresee the temperature
distribution along the cable route, so that the maximum applicable
current load was usually set as a compromise between understanding
of operation conditions and risk minimization. The availability of
industrial
Distributed
Temperature Sensing (DTS) systems that measure in real time
temperatures all along the cable is a first step in monitoring the
transmission system capacity. This monitoring solution is based on
using passive optical fibers as temperature sensors, either
integrated directly inside a high voltage cable or mounted
externally on the cable insulation. A solution for overhead lines
is also available. In this case the optical fiber is integrated
into the core of a phase wire of overhead transmission lines
(OPPC). The integrated Dynamic Cable Rating (DCR) or also called
Real Time Thermal Rating (RTTR) solution enables not only to
continuously monitor the temperature of a high voltage cable
circuit in real time, but to safely utilize the existing network
capacity to its maximum. Furthermore it provides the ability to the
operator to predict the behavior of the transmission system upon
major changes made to its initial operating conditions.
Control
To ensure safe and predictable operation the components of the
transmission system are controlled with generators, switches,
circuit breakers and loads. The voltage, power, frequency, load
factor, and reliability capabilities of the transmission system are
designed to provide cost effective performance for the
customers.
Load balancing
The transmission system provides for base load and
peak load capability, with safety and
fault tolerance margins. The peak load times vary by region largely
due to the industry mix. In very hot and very cold climates home
air conditioning and heating loads have an effect on the overall
load. They are typically highest in the late afternoon in the
hottest part of the year and in mid-mornings and mid-evenings in
the coldest part of the year. This makes the power requirements
vary by the season and the time of day. Distribution system designs
always take the base load and the peak load into
consideration.
The transmission system usually does not have a large buffering
capability to match the loads with the generation. Thus generation
has to be kept matched to the load, to prevent overloading failures
of the generation equipment.
Multiple sources and loads can be connected to the transmission
system and they must be controlled to provide orderly transfer of
power. In centralized power generation, only local control of
generation is necessary, and it involves
synchronization of the generation
units, to prevent large transients and overload
conditions.
In
distributed power
generation the generators are geographically distributed and
the process to bring them online and offline must be carefully
controlled. The load control signals can either be sent on separate
lines or on the power lines themselves. To load balance the voltage
and frequency can be used as a signaling mechanism.
In voltage signaling, the variation of voltage is used to increase
generation. The power added by any system increases as the line
voltage decreases. This arrangement is stable in principle. Voltage
based regulation is complex to use in mesh networks, since the
individual components and setpoints would need to be reconfigured
every time a new generator is added to the mesh.
In frequency signaling, the generating units match the frequency of
the power transmission system. In
droop speed control, if the frequency
decreases, the power is increased. (The drop in line frequency is
an indication that the increased load is causing the generators to
slow down.)
Wind turbines,
v2g
and other distributed storage and generation systems can be
connected to the power grid, and interact with it to improve system
operation.
Failure protection
Under excess load conditions, the system can be designed to fail
gracefully rather than all at once.
Brownouts occur when the supply power drops
below the demand.
Blackouts occur when
the supply fails completely.
Rolling blackouts, or load shedding, are intentionally-engineered
electrical power outages, used to distribute insufficient power
when the demand for electricity exceeds the supply.
Communications
Operators of long transmission lines require reliable
communications for
control of the power grid
and, often, associated generation and distribution facilities.
Fault-sensing
protection
relays at each end of the line must communicate to monitor the
flow of power into and out of the protected line section so that
faulted conductors or equipment can be quickly de-energized and the
balance of the system restored. Protection of the transmission line
from
short circuits and other faults
is usually so critical that
common
carrier telecommunications are insufficiently reliable, and in
remote areas a common carrier may not be available. Communication
systems associated with a transmission project may use:
Rarely, and for short distances, a utility will use pilot-wires
strung along the transmission line path. Leased circuits from
common carriers are not preferred since availability is not under
control of the electric power transmission organization.
Transmission lines can also be used to carry data: this is called
power-line carrier, or
PLC.
PLC signals can be easily received with a radio for the long wave
range.
Optical fibers can be included in the stranded conductors of a
transmission line, in the overhead shield wires. These cables are
known as optical ground wire (
OPGW).
Sometimes a standalone cable is used, all-dielectric
self-supporting (
ADSS) cable, attached to the transmission
line cross arms.
Some
jurisdictions, such as Minnesota
, prohibit energy transmission companies from
selling surplus communication bandwidth or acting as a
telecommunications common
carrier. Where the regulatory structure permits, the
utility can sell capacity in extra
dark
fibers to a common carrier, providing another revenue
stream.
Electricity market reform
Some regulators regard electric transmission to be a
natural monopoly and there are moves in
many countries to separately regulate transmission (see
electricity market).
Spain
was the
first country to establish a regional transmission
organization. In that country transmission operations and
market operations are controlled by separate companies. The
transmission system operator is
Red Eléctrica de España
(REE) and the wholesale electricity market operator is Operador del
Mercado Ibérico de Energía - Polo Español, S.A. (OMEL)
[6539]. Spain's
transmission system is interconnected with those of France,
Portugal, and Morocco.
In the United States and parts of Canada, electrical transmission
companies operate independently of generation and distribution
companies.
Merchant transmission
Merchant transmission is an arrangement where a
third party constructs and operates electric transmission lines
through the franchise area of an unrelated utility. Advocates of
merchant transmission claim that this will create competition to
construct the most efficient and lowest cost additions to the
transmission grid. Merchant transmission projects typically involve
DC lines because it is easier to limit flows to paying
customers.
Operating
merchant transmission projects in the United States
include the Cross
Sound Cable from Long Island, New York
to New Haven, Connecticut
, Neptune RTS Transmission Line from Sayreville,
N.J., to Newbridge, N.Y, ITC Holdings, Inc. transmission system in
the midwest, and Path 15 in California. Additional projects
are in development or have been proposed throughout the United
States.
There is only one unregulated or market interconnector in
Australia:
Basslink
between Tasmania and Victoria. Two DC links originally implemented
as market interconnectors
Directlink and
Murraylink have been converted to
regulated interconnectors.
NEMMCO
A major barrier to wider adoption of merchant transmission is the
difficulty in identifying who benefits from the facility so that
the beneficiaries will pay the toll. Also, it is difficult for a
merchant transmission line to compete when the alternative
transmission lines are subsidized by other utility
businesses.
Health concerns
The
preponderance of
evidence suggests that the low-power, low-frequency,
electromagnetic radiation associated with household current does
not constitute a short or long term health hazard. Some studies
have found statistical correlations between various diseases and
living or working near power lines.
Government policy
Historically, local governments have exercised authority over the
grid and have significant disincentives to take action that would
benefit states other than their own. Localities with cheap
electricity have a disincentive to making
interstate commerce in electricity
trading easier, since other regions will be able to compete for
local energy and drive up rates. Some regulators in Maine for
example do not wish to address congestion problems because the
congestion serves to keep Maine rates low. Further, vocal local
constituencies can block or slow permitting by pointing to visual
impact, environmental, and perceived health concerns. In the US,
generation is growing 4 times faster than transmission, but big
transmission upgrades require the coordination of multiple states,
a multitude of interlocking permits, and cooperation between a
significant portion of the 500 companies that own the grid. From a
policy perspective, the control of the grid is
balkanized, and even former
energy secretary Bill Richardson refers to it as a
third
world grid. There have been efforts in the EU and US to
confront the problem. The US national security interest in
significantly growing transmission capacity drove passage of the
2005 energy act giving the
Department of Energy the authority to approve transmission if
states refuse to act. However, soon after using its power to
designate two
National
Interest Electric Transmission Corridors, 14 senators signed a
letter stating the DOE was being too aggressive.
Special transmission
Grids for railways
In some countries where
electric
trains run on low frequency AC (e.g., 16.7 Hz and
25 Hz) power, there are separate single phase
traction power networks operated by
the railways. These grids are fed by separate generators in some
traction powerstations or by
traction current
converter plants from the public three phase AC network.
Superconducting cables
High-temperature
superconductors promise to revolutionize power distribution by
providing lossless transmission of electrical power. The
development of superconductors with transition temperatures higher
than the boiling point of
liquid
nitrogen has made the concept of superconducting power lines
commercially feasible, at least for high-load applications. It has
been estimated that the waste would be halved using this method,
since the necessary refrigeration equipment would consume about
half the power saved by the elimination of the majority of
resistive losses. In one hypothetical future system called a
SuperGrid, the cost of cooling would be
eliminated by coupling the transmission line with a liquid hydrogen
pipeline.
Superconducting cables are particularly suited to high load density
areas such as the business district of large cities, where purchase
of an
easement for cables would be very
costly.
Single wire earth return
Single wire earth return
(SWER) or single wire ground return is a single-wire transmission
line for supplying single-phase electrical power for an electrical
grid to remote areas at low cost. It is principally used for rural
electrification, but also finds use for larger isolated loads such
as water pumps, and light rail. Single wire earth return is also
used for HVDC over submarine power cables.
Wireless power transmission
Both
Nikola Tesla and
Hidetsugu Yagi attempted to devise systems
for large scale wireless power transmission, with no commercial
success.
Wireless power transmission has been studied for transmission of
power from
solar power
satellites to the earth. A high power array of
microwave transmitters would beam power to a
rectenna. Major engineering and economic
challenges face any solar power satellite project.
Cyber-warfare
The
Federal
government of the United States admits that the power grid is
susceptible to
cyber-warfare.
The
United States Department of Homeland
Security
works with industry to identify vulnerabilities and
to help industry enhance the security of control system networks,
the federal government is also working to ensure that security is
built in as we develop the next generation of 'smart grid'
networks. On April 8, 2009, it is believed that
China
or Russia
have
infiltrated the U.S. electrical grid and left behind software
programs that could be used to disrupt the system, according to
current and former national-security officials. China denies
intruding into the U.S. electrical grid. The
North American
Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC) has issued a public
notice that warns that the electrical grid is not adequately
protected from cyber attack. One counter measure the U.S. should
consider is disconnecting the power grid from the
Internet to decrease the likelihood of attack.
Massive
power outages caused by a cyber
attack, would cause a crisis making it difficult for the government
and emergency workers to respond to critical concerns leading to
national trauma.
Records
See also
Notes
- Hans Dieter Betz, Ulrich Schumann, Pierre Laroche (2009).
Lightning: Principles, Instruments and
Applications. Springer, pp. 202-203. ISBN 9781402090783.
Retrieved on 2009-05-13.
- Edison Electric Institute - Underground Vs.
Overhead Distribution Wires: Issues to Consider
- "SAGE first interim assessment: Power Lines and
Property, Wiring in Homes, and Electrical Equipment in
Homes"
- Should Power Lines be Underground?
- Weedy, Stephenson, and others
- Hughes
- Bureau of Census data reprinted in Hughes, pp. 282-283
- Hughes, pp. 293-295
- "Present Limits of Very Long Distance Transmission
Systems"
- Technology Options 2003. (2003). US
Climate Change Technology Program.
-
http://www.geni.org/globalenergy/library/technical-articles/transmission/cigre/present-limits-of-very-long-distance-transmission-systems/index.shtml
- Jacob Oestergaard et al., Energy losses of superconducting
power transmission cables in the grid, [1]
- http://www.futureenergies.com/print.php?sid=237
- BBC: Spies 'infiltrate US power grid'
- CNN: Video
- Reuters: US concerned power grid vulnerable to
cyber-attack
- Electricity Grid in U.S. Penetrated By Spies
- Fox News: Video
- Xinhua: China denies intruding into the U.S.
electrical grid
- China Daily: 'China threat' theory
rejected
- NERC Public Notice
- ABC News: Video
- The Raw Story: Disconnect electrical grid from
Internet, former terror czar Clarke warns
- Fox News: Video
Further reading
- Grigsby, L. L., et al. The Electric Power Engineering
Handbook. USA: CRC Press. (2001). ISBN 0-8493-8578-4
- Thomas P. Hughes, Networks of Power:
Electrification in Western Society 1880-1930, The Johns
Hopkins University Press,Baltimore 1983 ISBN 0-8018-2873-2, an
excellent overview of development during the first 50 years of
commercial electric power
- Westinghouse Electric Corporation, "Electric power
transmission patents; Tesla polyphase system". (Transmission
of power; polyphase system; Tesla
patents)
- Pansini, Anthony J, E.E., P.E. undergrounding electric
lines. USA Hayden Book Co, 1978. ISBN 0-8104-0827-9
External links