In contemporary medium-voltage distribution networks heavily penetrated by distributed energy resources(DERs),the harmonic components injected by power-electronic interfacing converters,together with the inherently in...In contemporary medium-voltage distribution networks heavily penetrated by distributed energy resources(DERs),the harmonic components injected by power-electronic interfacing converters,together with the inherently intermittent output of renewable generation,distort the zero-sequence current and continuously reshape its frequency spectrum.As a result,single-line-to-ground(SLG)faults exhibit a pronounced,strongly non-stationary behaviour that varies with operating point,load mix and DER dispatch.Under such circumstances the performance of traditional rule-based algorithms—or methods that rely solely on steady-state frequency-domain indicators—degrades sharply,and they no longer satisfy the accuracy and universality required by practical protection systems.To overcome these shortcomings,the present study develops an SLG-fault identification scheme that transforms the zero-sequence currentwaveforminto two-dimensional image representations and processes themwith a convolutional neural network(CNN).First,the causes of sample-distribution imbalance are analysed in detail by considering different neutralgrounding configurations,fault-inception mechanisms and the statistical probability of fault occurrence on each phase.Building on these insights,a discriminator network incorporating a Convolutional Block Attention Module(CBAM)is designed to autonomously extract multi-layer spatial-spectral features,while Gradient-weighted Class Activation Mapping(Grad-CAM)is employed to visualise the contribution of every salient image region,thereby enhancing interpretability.A comprehensive simulation platform is subsequently established for a DER-rich distribution system encompassing several representative topologies,feeder lengths and DER penetration levels.Large numbers of realistic SLG-fault scenarios are generated—including noise and measurement uncertainty—and are used to train,validate and test the proposed model.Extensive simulation campaigns,corroborated by field measurements from an actual utility network,demonstrate that the proposed approach attains an SLG-fault identification accuracy approaching 100 percent and maintains robust performance under severe noise conditions,confirming its suitability for real-world engineering applications.展开更多
基金supported by the Science and Technology Program of China Southern Power Grid(031800KC23120003).
文摘In contemporary medium-voltage distribution networks heavily penetrated by distributed energy resources(DERs),the harmonic components injected by power-electronic interfacing converters,together with the inherently intermittent output of renewable generation,distort the zero-sequence current and continuously reshape its frequency spectrum.As a result,single-line-to-ground(SLG)faults exhibit a pronounced,strongly non-stationary behaviour that varies with operating point,load mix and DER dispatch.Under such circumstances the performance of traditional rule-based algorithms—or methods that rely solely on steady-state frequency-domain indicators—degrades sharply,and they no longer satisfy the accuracy and universality required by practical protection systems.To overcome these shortcomings,the present study develops an SLG-fault identification scheme that transforms the zero-sequence currentwaveforminto two-dimensional image representations and processes themwith a convolutional neural network(CNN).First,the causes of sample-distribution imbalance are analysed in detail by considering different neutralgrounding configurations,fault-inception mechanisms and the statistical probability of fault occurrence on each phase.Building on these insights,a discriminator network incorporating a Convolutional Block Attention Module(CBAM)is designed to autonomously extract multi-layer spatial-spectral features,while Gradient-weighted Class Activation Mapping(Grad-CAM)is employed to visualise the contribution of every salient image region,thereby enhancing interpretability.A comprehensive simulation platform is subsequently established for a DER-rich distribution system encompassing several representative topologies,feeder lengths and DER penetration levels.Large numbers of realistic SLG-fault scenarios are generated—including noise and measurement uncertainty—and are used to train,validate and test the proposed model.Extensive simulation campaigns,corroborated by field measurements from an actual utility network,demonstrate that the proposed approach attains an SLG-fault identification accuracy approaching 100 percent and maintains robust performance under severe noise conditions,confirming its suitability for real-world engineering applications.