depicts generators at the top connected to voltage transformers, (vertical) transmission lines and (horizontal)
busbars. The switch symbols are protective relays. Zone boundaries are indicated by colored dashed lines The objective of a protection scheme is to keep the power system stable by isolating only the components that are under fault, whilst leaving as much of the network as possible in operation, thus minimizing the
loss of load. This property of the protection system is called
selectivity. To achieve selectivity, the power system is subdivided into
protective zones, each containing a power system component (
generator, bus,
transformer,
transmission or distribution line,
motor) that should be protected. Each zone has its own protection device(s) and provides sensitivity to faults within its boundaries. If a fault were to occur in a given zone, necessary actions will be executed to isolate that zone from the entire system (all circuit breakers in a given zone with a fault will open in order to isolate the fault). The boundaries of zones overlap to leave no part of grid without protection, overlapped regions usually surround circuit breakers with two sets of
instrument transformers and relays for each circuit breaker. The overlapping regions of sensitivity have a drawback of multiple relays possibly tripping when the fault is in the overlapped area. For example, unless special arrangements are made, a
short circuit above the relay A, but still within the blue zone on the diagram, might cause
overcurrent conditions in relays A, C, and D and cause them to trip, with the two latter trips being redundant. This can be avoided by using specialized relays (
distance or
directional ones) or by coordinating the relay actions using a
communication channel ("pilot"). In any case, overlapped regions are designed to be as small as possible such that when a fault occurs in an overlap region and the two zones which encompass the fault are isolated, the sector of the power system.
Backup The power protection system needs to be resilient to its own malfunctions. Thus it includes backup protection devices. For example if the fault is in the top left red zone, but outside the blue zone, it is expected to be handled by the "primary" relay A. If the relay A malfunctions and cannot clear the fault, the
backup relays C and D in the adjacent (blue) zone will trip. This can be arranged without coordination (for example, the delay setting of C and D can be higher so they do not act if A succeeds in clearing the fault) or through coordination via a pilot. The term
local backup is used when the backup relays are within the same zone as the "primary" one being duplicated. Local back-up protection, like the primary protective device, will isolate the elements of the plant affected by the fault to clear the latter. Adjacent-zone ("remote") back-up protection will generally isolate both the affected and unaffected items of plant to clear the fault. == Fault types ==