Dashboard PE Power Exam Prep Protection Overcurrent & coordination Bus protection — ANSI 87B differential

Bus protection — ANSI 87B differential

Substation bus differential applying KCL across all feeder CTs. High-impedance vs low-impedance numerical 87B (SEL-487B / REB670 / B30 / 7SS8), zone-interlocked OC for distribution, multi-zone topology, 87B + 50BF coordination.

Senior ~11 min

Step 1 — Bus protection: ANSI 87B differential

0.55×
ANSI type state

Reference notes

Substation bus protection demands the fastest, most-selective protection in the substation. Bus faults are rare but catastrophic — every connected feeder feeds fault current into a single point. ANSI 87B differential is the standard primary scheme. Use Next → to walk through high-impedance vs low-impedance numerical 87B, zone-interlocked OC alternatives, and 87B + 50BF coordination.

The bus-protection problem

ANSI 87B principle

Kirchhoff's Current Law applied to the bus node:

Σ Ifeeders = 0 (healthy) → no trip
Σ Ifeeders ≠ 0 (internal bus fault) → trip all bus breakers

All feeder CT secondary currents are summed algebraically. External (through) faults balance (current in = current out), so the sum stays at zero. Internal bus faults break the balance.

High-impedance 87B (classical)

Low-impedance numerical 87B (modern)

Zone-interlocked overcurrent (cheaper alternative)

For lower-cost distribution buses (4-25 kV) where dedicated 87B isn't economic:

87B + 50BF coordination

When 87B trips, it commands ALL breakers on the bus to open. 50BF monitors each breaker:

Multi-zone configurations

Complex bus topologies — ring bus, breaker-and-a-half, double-bus single-breaker — have multiple bus zones connected in series via bus-tie breakers. Modern numerical 87B supports up to ~20 zones simultaneously. Each zone has its own differential element; only the breakers around the faulted zone are tripped, leaving other zones in service.

Redundancy for critical buses

Per NERC PRC standards on bulk-electric-system buses (typically 230 kV+, universal at 500 kV and 765 kV): TWO complete independent 87B schemes from different manufacturers, with separate CT cores (often dual-core CTs), separate trip paths to dual breaker trip coils (TC1 / TC2), separate DC supplies. Trip outputs OR'd.

Testing & commissioning

Secondary current injection at each CT simulates a fault to verify the differential element operates correctly. Annual to biannual cycle per IEEE C37.230.

Take-away. Bus protection = ANSI 87B differential applying KCL to all feeder CTs. High-impedance 87B is robust against CT saturation, simple, but requires identical CTs and static topology. Low-impedance numerical 87B (SEL-487B / REB670 / B30 / 7SS8) handles different CT ratios, dynamic topology, and multi-zone configurations — modern standard. Zone-interlocked OC is the cheap distribution-class alternative. 87B + 50BF coordination handles breaker failures. NERC PRC mandates dual-redundant 87B on bulk-electric-system buses.