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Posted M AR 16 2012 by EDV ARD in CABLES, ENERGY AND PO WER with 8 COM M ENTS
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There are copper busbars, aluminium busbars... and copper busbars made of aluminium
Apart from their electrical conductivity, the other technologically important properties of copper and aluminium differ so significantly (density is an obvious example) that their areas of application are and have always been clearly distinct. And not a lot has changed or is likely to change in that respect. The only really novel development in recent years has been the introduction of cast copper rotor cages. There are really only three, now four, areas in electrical engineering in which aluminium and copper are competing in the same market segments:
Practical uses of copper and aluminium in the electrical engineering sector - areas in which both metals can be used are rare
The decision here is which is the lesser of two evils: a greater cable cross-section or a higher cable weight? Generally speaking, aluminium cable will be substantially cheaper. However, it is still worth recalling that copper cable is more ductile and less susceptible to electrical contact problems and thus offers a greater margin of safety than a corresponding aluminium cable. Due to its smaller cross-section, the copper cable will also be easier to install as the stiffness of the cable depends on the square of the cross-sectional area and thus on the fourth power of the diameter!
It is also possible to get very small stranded copper cable; stranded aluminium cable is only available at nominal cross-sectional areas of at least 10 mm2 and the individual strands are still very thick compared to those in the equivalently sized copper cable. For technical reasons, socalled finely stranded and extra finely stranded conductors are only available in copper. As a result, the finest aluminium conductors available are significantly stiffer than the finest copper conductors and this difference has on occasion led to some rather costly surprises. On paper, the aluminium conductor may well be cheaper to buy, but that fails to take into account the extra cost and effort involved in installing the less pliable aluminium cables.
The underground cable in use at Dietlikon power station in Switzerland - a compromise solution that combines the technological properties of copper and the price of aluminium
Recently, a combination Cu-Al cable has appeared as a compromise solution and is being used at the Dietlikon power utility in Switzerland as an underground cable in low-voltage distribution networks. A representative from the Swiss Dietlikon plant gave a presentation on the product and the underlying concept after being invited to attend meetings of DKE Committee 712 Safety of Information Technology Installations including Equipotential Bonding and Earthing (DKE: German Commission for Electrical, Electronic and Information Technologies). The Dietlikon electricity utility is the first known distribution network operator that is systematically converting its distribution network to a five-wire TN-S system work that it of course only carries out during repairs, network expansions and new installations.
In this new cable, the phase conductors have the same cross-section as the neutral conductor, which helps to achieve a symmetrical cable structure. The phase conductors are made of aluminium, while the same-diameter neutral conductor is of copper, enabling it to carry a greater current and thus making the cable better suited to coping with the harmonic pollution problems that are so commonly discussed today. The protective earth conductor is configured in this case as a surrounding copper-wire shield, which offers far higher symmetry and EMC than a conventional i fifth conductor.
Transformers
The problem of winding space is not as acute in transformers as it is in electric motors, which is why the use of aluminium can at least be taken into consideration. In fact the main leakage channel, i.e. the gap between the HV and LV windings, must have a certain size for the following three reasons: insulation, limiting the short-circuit current, and cooling. However, a transformer with aluminium windings will be larger if power losses and all other important operational data, such as the short-circuit voltage, are to be kept at the same level as an equivalent transformer with copper windings (after all, this is what we mean when we say two transformers are equivalent). However, the total weight of the marginally larger transformer with aluminium windings will be slightly lower. Differences in manu facturing costs pretty much cancel each other out and in the opinion of a number of well-respected manufacturing companies, the choice of conductor material is primarily a question of company philosophy.
Busbars
Two-copper busbars
In this application, spatial requirements weigh even less heavily in the decision-making process, but still remain a factor. Secondly, busbar applications are characterized by a large amount of conducting material and a small quantity of insulating material in a small space. This highlights the differences in material prices. Thirdly, the large number of electrical connections within this small volume mean that the connectivity problems as sociated with aluminium are more pronounced in such applications. When all these aspects are taken into consideration, we are left with a stalemate and the question of which material to select becomes almost philosophical. However, it is important to ensure that prices and costs are not being confused. If price is taken as the main criterion for selection, aluminium generally tends to be preferred. But if all the costs (including operational costs) are taken into account, it usually turns out that aluminium can learn a thing or two from copper. Copper it seems also has the better appearance, because some of the aluminium busbars available are copper-coated not to improve electrical contact (because drilling, punching and screwing will anyway damage the copper coat), but simply for aesthetic reasons. One new area of application is copper rotor cages: In this application, the crucial factor is the greater electrical conductivity per unit volume of copper. This factor alone made it worthwhile
tackling all the technical problems associated with the development of these devices. For more information, the reader is referred to descriptions available elsewhere. Aluminiums undisputed domain is that of overhead high -voltage cables, where space require ments are of no significance but where weight plays a critical role. The lower strength of alu minium means that the conductor cables need to be reinforced with a steel core but this does not change the fact that the cables can be produced at low cost and that the two materials can be readily separated from one another magnetically when scrapped.