Jindo–Jeju HVDC system

The Jindo–Jeju HVDC system is a 105 km HVDC submarine cable connection in South Korea between the island of Jindo, close to the Korean Peninsula, and the more distant island of Jeju. The system has a capacity of 400 MW and transmission voltage of ±250 kV and was put into service in 2014.[1] It is the second HVDC link to Jeju Island, after the Haenam–Cheju link completed in the late 1990s (the spelling of the island’s name was changed from Cheju to Jeju in 2000).

Jindo–Jeju HVDC system
Location
CountryKorea
Coordinates34°23′08″N 126°28′24″E / 34.38556°N 126.47333°E / 34.38556; 126.47333 (Jindo–Jeju HVDC system – Jindo converter station)
33°27′17″N 126°11′15″E / 33.45472°N 126.18750°E / 33.45472; 126.18750 (Jindo–Jeju HVDC system – Jeju converter station)
FromJindo
ToJeju Island
Ownership information
OwnerKorea Electric Power Corporation
Construction information
Manufacturer of conductor/cableLS Cable and System
Manufacturer of substationsAlstom Grid
Commissioned2014
Technical information
TypeTransmission
Type of currentHVDC
Total length105 km (65 mi)
Power rating400 MW
DC voltage±250 kV
No. of poles2

The Jindo–Jeju HVDC system is owned and operated by Korea Electric Power Corporation (KEPCO). The cables were designed and built by LS Cable and System and the converter stations were designed and built by Alstom Grid.

The scheme is bipolar but unlike the Haenam–Cheju connection, which used a relatively conventional arrangement with two high-voltage cables and a sea return, Jindo–Jeju HVDC system uses metallic return with a total of four cables: three high-voltage cables and one medium-voltage cable. The high-voltage cables use mass-impregnated paper as the insulation material while the medium-voltage cable uses Cross-linked polyethylene (XLPE) insulation.[2]

Two of the high-voltage cables are normally used as the respective high-voltage conductors for the two converter poles and the medium-voltage cable is normally used as the neutral return conductor, but the third high-voltage cable is capable of being connected in parallel with, or instead of, any of the other three cables, giving a large number of possible operating modes.[3]

The converter stations use Line-Commutated Converters with a conventional arrangement of a single Twelve-pulse bridge per pole.

Sites

edit
Site Coordinates
Jindo converter station 34°23′08″N 126°28′24″E / 34.38556°N 126.47333°E / 34.38556; 126.47333 (Jindo–Jeju HVDC system – Jindo converter station)
Jeju converter station 33°27′17″N 126°11′15″E / 33.45472°N 126.18750°E / 33.45472; 126.18750 (Jindo–Jeju HVDC system – Jeju converter station)

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Grid energises Jeju Island in South Korea[permanent dead link], Alstom Press Release, 7 July 2014.
  2. ^ Development and type tests of HVDC ±250 MIsubmarine cable system Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine, Tae-ho Lee et al, Proceedings of the 16th International Symposium on High Voltage Engineering.
  3. ^ Project Overview Archived 2015-11-19 at the Wayback Machine, LS Cable and System.
edit