- Pacific DC Intertie
The Pacific DC Intertie (also called Path 65) is an
electric power transmission line that transmitselectricity from thePacific Northwest to theLos Angeles area using high voltage direct current (HVDC). The line capacity is 3,100megawatts , which is enough to serve two to three million Los Angeles households and is 48.7% of theLos Angeles Department of Water and Power (LADWP) electrical system's peak capacity. [ cite web
url=http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-power28jul28,0,4534657.story?coll=la-home-headlines
title=Heat Wave Caught DWP Unprepared
publisher =L.A. Times online
date = September 10, 2006
author = Sharon Bernstein and Amanda Covarrubias, Times Staff Writers
accessdate = 2006-09-11 ]The intertie originates near the
Columbia River at theCelilo Converter Station onBonneville Power Administration 's (BPA) grid outsideThe Dalles, Oregon and is connected exclusively to theSylmar Converter Station north ofLos Angeles , which is owned by five utility companies and managed by LADWP. The Intertie is capable of transmitting power in either direction, but power on the Intertie flows mostly from north to south.The idea of shipping
hydroelectric power toSouthern California had been proposed as early as the 1930s, but was opposed and scrapped. By 1961, U.S. presidentJohn F. Kennedy authorized a large public works project, using new high voltage direct current technology fromSweden . The project was undertaken as a close collaboration betweenGeneral Electric of the U.S. andASEA ofSweden . Private California power companies opposed the project but their technical objections were rebutted byUno Lamm of ASEA at theIEEE meeting in New York in 1963. When completed in 1970 the combined AC and DC transmission system was estimated to save consumers in Los Angeles approximately U.S. $600,000 per day by use of electric power from projects on theColumbia River .The Pacific Intertie takes advantage of differing power demand patterns between the northwestern and southwestern U.S. During winter, the northern region operates electrical heating devices while the southern portion uses relatively little electricity. In summer, the north uses little electricity while the south reaches peak demand due to air conditioning usage. Any time the Intertie demand lessens, the excess is distributed elsewhere on the western powergrid (states west of the Great Plains, including Colorado and New Mexico). [ cite web
url=http://www.ewh.ieee.org/r7/toronto/events/oct0303/prabha.ppt
format =powerpoint
title = Power System Security in the New Industry Environment: Challenges and Solutions
author = Prabha Kundur, Powertech Labs Inc.
pages = 17
publisher =IEEE
date = October 3, 2003
accessdate = 2006-09-11 ]The Pacific Intertie consists of:
* TheCelilo Converter Station which converts three phase 60 Hz AC at 235 to 525 kV to 500 kV DC.
* The grounding system at Celilo consists of 1,067 cast iron anodes buried in a two foot trench ofpetroleum coke , which behaves as an electrode, arranged in a ring of 3,255 meters (2.02 mi) circumference at Rice Flats (nearRice, Oregon ), which is 10.6 km (6.6 mi) SSE of Celilo. It is connected to the converter station by two aerial cables.
* A 1,362 kilometer (846 mile) overhead transmission line consisting of two uninsulated conductors 1,171 mm2 containing a steel wire core for strength.
* TheSylmar Converter Station which converts DC to AC (a process also called inverting) and phase-synchronized with the L.A. power grid.
* The Sylmar grounding system is 24 silicon-iron alloy electrodes submerged in thePacific Ocean suspended in concrete enclosures about one meter above the ocean floor. The grounding array is 48 km (30 mi) from the converter station.
*The wires have a capacity of 2gigawatt s in bipolar mode and 1.55 gigawatts with earth return. [ cite web
url = http://web.archive.org/web/20050426045806/http://www.transmission.bpa.gov/cigresc14/Compendium/PACIFIC.htm
title = The Pacific Intertie Scheme
publisher =Bonneville Power Administration
date = 2000-11-3
accessdate = 2006-09-10]Originally only
mercury arc rectifier s were used as static inverter valves. The valves were series connected in three six-pulse valve bridges for each pole. The blockingvoltage of the valves was 133 kV with a maximum current of 1,800ampere s, for a transmission rate of 1,440 megawatts with a symmetrical voltage of 400 kV against earth. The line is the DC part of a system of four 500 kV lines that connect thePacific Northwest with the Southwest; the AC part isPath 15 . This is one of two HVDC lines serving Los Angeles, the other is theIntermountain .*In 1972, after the
Sylmar earthquake , the static inverter station in Sylmar had to be reconstructed after damage to the largest part.
*In 1982, the power rating of the mercury arc valve rectifiers was raised by various improvements to 1,600 megawatts.
*In 1984, the transmission voltage was pushed to 500 kV and the transmission power was increased to 2,000 megawatts by adding two six-pulsethyristor valve groups to each pole.
*In 1989, a further increase of the transmission power took place by a parallel switched thyristor static inverter in Celilo and Sylmar.
*In 2004, Sylmar East station was upgraded from 1,100 MW to 3,100 MW (rededicated as the Sylmar Converter Station in 2005). The controls and older converters, including the mercury arc valves, were completely replaced by a single pair of 3,100 MW 12-pulse converters built by ABB. In parallel with this project, the six-pulse mercury arc valves at the Celilo Converter Station were replaced with Siemens light-triggered thyristors (MARP replacement).ee also
*
Uno Lamm
*Intermountain References
External links
More on the ABB website on Pacific HVDC Intertie:
* [http://www.abb.com/GLOBAL/GAD/GAD02181.NSF/viewUNID/C1256D71001E0037C1256B8000371E41!OpenDocument Abb.com]
* [http://www.abb.com/GLOBAL/GAD/GAD02181.NSF/viewUNID/C1256D71001E0037C1256B81002E886B!OpenDocument Abb.com]
* [http://www02.abb.com/global/gad/gad02007.nsf/Images/36EEF811D43233BBC1256EBD006FB569/$File/L32457_720.jpg?OpenElement aerial photo of Sylmar inverter plant]
* [http://wecc.biz/ Wecc.biz]
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