Sei sulla pagina 1di 27

International council on large electric systems 2011 Colloquium STUDY COMMITTEE D2 Information Systems and Telecommunication

D2-01 A07 OPTICAL CABLES MANAGEMENT SYSTEM FOR 500KV HVAC NETWORKS

CARLOS ALBERTO DI PALMA TRANELSA CONSULTORA


ARGENTINA

GUILLERMO GALARZA ABB SA


ARGENTINA

ARIEL CAMPOS TRANSENER SA


ARGENTINA

eett@tranelsa.com

guillermo.galarza@ar.abb.com

ariel.campos@transx.com.ar

CURRENT SITUATION

(part 1)

The Argentinas 500kV High Voltage Transmission System has a vast optical cable network (order of 5300 km) and 127,000 km of fibers, along the whole country, as well as a lot of new projects under development The optical cable network is used for transporting services of: *the own Main EHV Transporter (Transener) *other 500, 330 and 220kV HV Transmission Operators *Generation Plants Agents *HV trunk distributors (sub-transmission) *etc The services channeled by the optical cable network are mainly: *differential protection system and main protection system *teleprotection system (backup of main protection system) *data of the SCADA system *data of stabilization resources in order to assure the high Availability figures of the Argentinas National Interconnected System (SADI) *data exchange with other countries where HV interconnections are made *remote supervision of communication and control systems *connection of digital telephony trunks between PABXs *etc
2

CURRENT SITUATION (part 2)

Nowadays, the EHV System of Transener has installed several remote management systems (NMS), such as: *NMS of the SDH digital communication systems *NMS of the digital teleprotection systems *NMS of the SHF digital radiolinks *NMS of the private automatic exchange networks (PABX) *NMS of the optical amplification chain (when it is applicable) *Overall NMS

BUT the performance of fiber optic cables are not monitored yet Consequently, it is necessary to plan the automatic supervision of all optical cables networks in order to have the effectively monitoring of the whole communication system
>> Optical Cables Management System (OCMS)<<

MAIN BENEFITS TO BE OBTAINED (part 1)

Permanent and continue monitoring/supervision of the whole optical cable network Reduction of failure detection time Reduction of failure restoration time Very precise and accurate optical cable performance information Increase of the Total Annual Availability (Ai) of the whole optical cables network because the irreversible failure rate (TIF) will be minimal due to: *the early detection of the performance degradation *the fast and effective preventive actions Reduction of preventive maintenance costs. Replacement of the annual measurements of each optical cable (24 optical fibers) with OTDR portable instruments along of thousands of kilometers Warranty of the right conditions of the optical cables in-use (and their fibers) Maximization of the level of utilization of the communication systems (full operative capacity), as well as the services transported by the optical cables Linkage between the geographical documentation system (GIS) of Transener and the location of optical cables (and their joint boxes)

MAIN BENEFITS TO BE OBTAINED (part 2)

Reduction of the critical failures due to the permanent and continuos monitoring process Online verification of the installation process of the new optical cables to be installed (during the commissioning period) Audit of the quality of maintenance (repair tasks) of the existing installed optical cables

>> After the development and explosive growth of the optical cable network, it is necessary to focus into the quality of service (QoS) of the EHV System, as well as the reduction of maintenance costs of the optical cable network<< Consequently, it is necessary: *monitoring optical cable degradation (measurement of fiber attenuation) *monitoring breaking situations (measurement of fiber length) *monitoring splice degradation/damages (measurement of splice losses) *monitoring water ingress (measurement of H2 absorption in splice boxes)

OTDR AND BACKSCATTERING TECHNIQUE

OTDR module is capable of: fault location as well as the analysis of the optical fiber system Measurements of attenuation, rate of attenuation, distance, etc Measurements of reflectance (as ratio of reflected power to incident power of an event /connector/splice) additional features like automatic event detection, table of events, optical return loss, overlapping of traces data storage capability additional functionalities like light source, power meter

10

MONITORING PROCEDURES (part 1)

CRITERION # 1 In order to monitor the quality of service of the optical cable it is possible to adopt the criterion of monitoring all fibers of the whole optical cable That means that the monitoring process must coexist with the transmission of information in the same fibers Optical filters as well as WDM multiplexers must be used in order to combine the monitoring wavelength m with the signal wavelength j of the communication system, without interfering between them (m signal must be -60dB from j signal)

11

MONITORING PROCEDURES (part 2)

CRITERION # 2 In order to monitor the quality of service of optical cables, it is possible to adopt the criterion of monitoring the dark fibers that are not used by the useful transmission In such case it is not necessary (exceptions that can be seen on the paper) neither to install optical switches in order to verify all fibers of the optical cable, nor install optical filters in the enlighten fibers Consequently, the monitoring system will not interact with the communication system that is transmitting in the enlighten fibers

12

MONITORING PROCEDURES (part 3)

CRITERION # 2 (criterion of dark fibers monitoring)

The main advantages of this criterion are: *low cost of implementation *no interferences with the useful wavelengths *it is not necessary to enter into systems that are in-service *possibility of using any monitoring wavelength *reduction of the time detection of failures because it is not necessary to do the cycle of measurements of 24 optical fibers (per cable)

13

FIBER MONITORING SYSTEM (part 1)

REMOTE MEASUREMENT UNIT (MRU)


An optical coupler permits the injection and extraction of light signal to/from the dark fiber An optical switch (automatically controlled) can select between monitoring dark fiber # 1 (main) and dark fiber # 2 (backup monitoring fiber) on each supervised cables in the Node The optical measurement unit includes OTDR module multitest, as well as light source emitter, optical power meter The OTDR module is remotely controlled and provides the optical signals for measurement, so as also to draw reflection graphs by bidirectional tests The controller and data processor (CPU) will make, among others, the following functions: * control of the whole measurement process * storage of the measured data * analysis of the obtained results * communication with the remote Server through the existing communication systems (SDH fiber optic system; SHF digital radiolink)

14

15

FIBER MONITORING SYSTEM (part 2)

REMOTE MANAGEMENT CENTER (RMC) It will consist of a Server that will centralize the information of several MRU nodes, as well as storage the whole information of all optical cables in its Data Base The Server will manage the collected information and give alerts to the O&M area in order to do the consequent actions of maintenance The measurement information will be included in the geographical system (GIS) that Transener normally uses for his whole EHV network. Consequently, the event of an optical cable failure (and their features) will be precisely located The RMC Center will be suitable for processing the OTDR measurements and the traces, as well as the rest of information of each MRN node (optical cable ID; dark fiber in-use; date of events; etc) Consequently, the failed optical cable as well as the failure location, place, etc, will be shown immediately, in spite of the network location where the event has happened The dynamic range of the OTDR instrument must cover: *optimal distance: 100% of the optical cable length *acceptable distance: 70-80% of the optical cable length
16

FIBER MONITORING SYSTEM (part 3)

STAGES Failure detection: in case of a performance degradation of an optical fiber (cable), the Remote Unit (RMU) will send an alarm to the Server (RMC), together with its related information (date, time, failure details, failure location, etc)

Processing: the Server will register the failure/degradation event received and send a notification to the O&M office with all the details collected about the failure
Information: additionally to the GIS failure location, it will be possible to open several lapels with information like: * splice details * specific span (between two splice boxes) * end-to-end optical link * monitoring dark fiber (main dark fiber; backup one) Additionally, the Server can add information coming from the NMS System of the SDH Communication System in order to confirm the degradation detected by the OCMS (double-checking method)
17

FIBER MONITORING SYSTEM (part 4)

SENSORS
They are necessary in order to verify the optical fiber performance Humidity detectors: they are based on the Hydrogen absorption and include a hydro-absorbent material that will expand causing a fiber loss due to a consequent macrobending of the fiber Stress detectors: they are optical fibre sensors of distributed strain and temperature range, for monitoring the mechanical stress. They allow to make high resolution measurements, as well as the measurement for long distance links. These sensors are based on Brillouin effect, and can measure simultaneously, both temperature and mechanical stress on optical standard fibres according to ITU-T G.652 (details on paper)

18

FIBER MONITORING SYSTEM (part 5)

MEASUREMENT OF TRACE
The MNR node uses an OTDR module multitest in order to measure the features of the optical fibers (cable) that are involved in the Node Each event of the link that could cause a reflection will be drawn on a trace of the OTDR. It will allow to obtain information related to that event: *attenuation measurement *reflections produced *discontinuities *etc The failures will be represented by reflections, due to different situations as: *misalignment between optical cables and light emitter *failures due to microbending located in splicing boxes *presence of dust in optical connectors *cut in fibers *macrobending of the optical cable

19

FIBER MONITORING SYSTEM (part 6)

PROCESS
In the MRU node will be saved the right graph/trace of the optical fiber during the commissioning period, in order to be used as the reference trace Subsequent traces that can include a failure will differ from the original trace. Consequently, it will be produced: *generation of an alarm *distance calculation to the event *location of the event within the GIS system The measurement will be performed continuously, making a permanent comparison between the original trace and new traces Both traces (original trace; trace with failure) will be overlapped showing the differences as well as doing a comparative analysis The traces will be selected by the monitoring system, as follow: *original trace (reference trace) *trace with failure (alarm trace) *overlapped traces (showing differences)
20

FIBER MONITORING SYSTEM (part 7)

Each MRU Node (located in a specific substation) can check more than one optical cable (to different routes) Examples: *substation Cobos can check the optical cables towards three routes: Cobos-El Bracho; Cobos-SanJuancito; Cobos-Monte Quemado *substation ChChoel can check the optical cables towards three routes: CChoel-BBlanca; CChoel-PMadryn; ChChoel-PAguila

>>> It is necessary to emphasize that the monitoring system for optical cables is not intended to replace the essential steps: *the correct choice of the best solution for both, optical cable and its accessories *the right installation process necessary to be made *the experienced subcontractors to be used *the qualified and certified handworkers to be used <<<<
21

QUESTIONS OF THE SPECIAL REPORT (part 1)

Q1.1-26. Please, further explain how you are doing at present, the method of revision and checking of the performance of your 5300km optical cable network. Please, try to compare the time that is currently needed for detecting a failure in your whole optical cable network, with the expected lower time that you estimate could be obtained with an on-line monitoring of the optical cables ANSWER Currently, the performance verification of the whole optical cable network is made one time per year (measurement of 24 fibers of each optical cable; bidirectional measurement). The current measurement time demands six months long. The expecting time by using a fiber monitoring system can be reduced to minutes/cable (by a continue online monitoring) Q1.1-27. Would the Utility Company accept doing the monitoring of one fiber optic per cable, instead of doing the monitoring of all fibres? ANSWER To use a monitoring of dark fibers (instead of the enlighten ones) is considered an acceptable method because it is not too simple to interact in the communication system that is in-service (including elements with the existing system) The insertion of filters and multiplexers would add attenuation in the links in-use (undesirable attenuation in case of long haul links) The dark monitoring method detects 85% of the possible failures in the optical cables because the most of the failures will happen in the entire cable and rarely happen in a particular fiber alone 25

QUESTIONS OF THE SPECIAL REPORT (part 2)

Q1.1-28. Do you have an estimation of the reduction of maintenance cost, as well as the improvement of System Availability that the on-line optical cable monitoring can obtain? Could you tell us if the Utility Company has saved a detailed, recorded information of each optical cable (in spite of its date of put in-service) in order to use it for the future monitoring system of these cables (comparison of performance by overlapping of graphs)? ANSWER It is not possible to calculate a precise value of maintenance costs reduction, but it should be considered: *avoid the measurement tasks in-field that nowadays imply 1,800 man-hours per year, plus the operative direct costs (127,000km of fibers) and indirect costs (risks, accidents, etc) *reduction of troubleshooting time considering that it is a wide area in a large country (see slide #25) *reduction of expensive repair tasks, through the preventive detection and reduction of catastrophic failures *execution of more precise tasks (according to the received precise information) *reduction of the out-of-service periods through the advanced perception of degradation)
26

QUESTIONS OF THE SPECIAL REPORT (part 3)

Q1.1-28. Do you have an estimation of the reduction of maintenance cost, as well as the improvement of System Availability that the on-line optical cable monitoring can obtain? Could you tell us if the Utility Company has saved a detailed, recorded information of each optical cable (in spite of its date of put in-service) in order to use it for the future monitoring system of these cables (comparison of performance by overlapping of graphs)? ANSWER The Availability improvement of the whole optical communication system will be important because it will minimize failures in optical cables (through control of the installation process/repair process and their useful lifetime) that currently are detected after some time has elapsed The detailed information of each optical cable (graphs, traces) has been saved and is available for use in a future database of the OCMS

27

Potrebbero piacerti anche