Dashboard PE Power Exam Prep Electric Power Devices Transformers Transformer parallel operation

Transformer parallel operation

Essential conditions (V ratio, phase sequence, vector group, polarity). Load divides inversely with Z_pu on common base. Voltage-ratio mismatch → circulating current. ANSI 90 OLTC parallel control.

Junior ~11 min

Step 1 — Parallel operation: load sharing on a common bus

0.55×
S_T1 S_T2 balance

Reference notes

When the load exceeds a single transformer's rating or redundancy is required, multiple transformers operate in parallel — primaries on one bus, secondaries on another. Use Next → to walk through the essential conditions for safe paralleling, the load-sharing math, the circulating-current pathology, and OLTC parallel control.

Essential conditions for safe parallel operation

  1. Same voltage ratio — different ratios drive a circulating current ΔV / (Z_1 + Z_2).
  2. Same phase sequence — wrong sequence creates massive opposing currents.
  3. Same vector group — Dy11 cannot parallel Dy1 (60 ° secondary phase difference = catastrophic).
  4. Same polarity (for single-phase units, additive vs subtractive).

Desirable (but not essential) conditions

Load sharing math — common-base method

Load divides INVERSELY with per-unit impedance referred to a COMMON kVA base:

Zpu_new = Zpu_old · (kVAnew_base / kVAown_rating)
Si = Stotal · Zeq / Zpu_i (on common base)

For two paralleled transformers: S_1 = S_total · Z_2 / (Z_1 + Z_2) and S_2 = S_total · Z_1 / (Z_1 + Z_2), both impedances referred to a common kVA base.

Worked example

The unequal-Zpu problem

Total achievable bank capacity is NOT the sum of ratings when Z_pu values differ — it is limited by the unit that reaches 100 % loading first. Two 1000-kVA units with different Z_pu cannot actually carry 2000 kVA in parallel; ~1850 kVA might be the practical limit before the low-Z unit overloads.

Procurement mitigation: spec sheets for new transformers that will parallel an existing one should require Z_pu within ±7.5 % of the existing unit (IEEE 141 / Red Book).

Circulating current from voltage-ratio mismatch

Even small voltage-ratio mismatches drive a circulating loop current:

Icirc = ΔV / (Z1 + Z2)

where ΔV is the difference in open-circuit secondary voltages. This current heats both transformers without serving load. Most common cause in service: paralleled OLTCs hunting independently → tap positions drift apart.

Vector-group errors — catastrophic

Dy11 paralleled with Dy1 puts the secondaries 60° apart electrically. Driving voltage ≈ V_pu (full per-unit). With only Z_pu (~5 %) limiting circulating current → I_circ ≈ 1/0.10 = 10 per unit = 1000 % of rated → fault-magnitude current → failure in seconds. Vector-group mismatch is an installation error that protection must catch immediately.

OLTC parallel control — ANSI 90

Paralleled OLTCs need coordinated control to prevent tap-changer hunting and circulating current. Two standard modes:

Both modes implemented in modern numerical voltage regulators (SEL-2431, GE C90, ABB REG670 variants).

Switching practice

Economics

Two smaller paralleled units typically cost MORE in capital than one larger unit of the same total kVA. But losses at light load can be LOWER — operate one unit at high efficiency, switch the second in only when load demands. Economics depend on the load duration curve at that location. Substations with peaky load benefit from multiple smaller units; constant-load substations favor one larger unit.

Take-away. Parallel operation needs same voltage ratio + same phase sequence + same vector group + same polarity. Load divides inversely with Z_pu on a common kVA base — the lower-Z unit takes more and overloads first. Voltage-ratio mismatch ΔV drives circulating current ΔV/(Z_1+Z_2); vector-group mismatch is catastrophic. ANSI 90 parallel-control logic (master-follower or circulating-current minimization) keeps OLTCs from hunting. Procurement should spec Z_pu matching ±7.5 % for new parallel-bank transformers.