Infrared temperature measurement sensors of overhead power conductors
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Castro Alonso, Pablo Bernardo


Fecha
2020-12-12Derechos
© 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license.
Publicado en
Sensors, 2020, 20(24), 7126
Editorial
MDPI
Palabras clave
Infrared thermometry
Non-contact temperature measurement
Ampacity
Overhead power conductor
Emissivity
Resumen/Abstract
Efficiency in power lines operation is becoming more crucial as the electrification increases and more renewable energies are connected into the grid. New methods and sensors are being added to create smart grids to face these challenges and conductor temperature sensors are one of them. Contact temperature sensors have several problems regarding safety and electronic damage due to the electromagnetic fields induced on the conductors. The goal of this paper is to describe an infrared temperature measurement sensor and to compare contact and non-contact temperatura measurements to estimate the temperature of power lines. Measurements were done for almost a year, storing around 150,000 measures of contact and infrared thermometers for many different weather and load conditions. The results conclude that the infrared system can be successfully used to control the temperature of the overhead conductor within a range of less than 4 _C difference with respect to contact temperature methods for the 88% of the samples and less than 6 _C for the 99%.
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