Insulation Coordination Study (PSCAD) | Sparrow RMS

Insulation Coordination Study

Overview

Insulation coordination is the systematic process of selecting insulation levels for electrical equipment so that they withstand overvoltages that arise during lightning strikes, switching operations, and temporary power frequency overvoltages. A properly executed insulation coordination study prevents equipment failures, reduces outage risk, and optimises capital expenditure on surge protection.

What the Study Covers

Comprehensive overvoltage stress quantification

Using PSCAD transient simulations, we model the propagation of overvoltage surges through the network and assess the protective margin available at each equipment location. The study delivers a comprehensive insulation coordination plan covering:

01

Overvoltage Stresses

Classification and quantification of overvoltage stresses: lightning (impulsive), switching, and temporary (TOV)

02

Surge Arrester Strategy

Selection and placement of surge arresters (metal oxide varistors) across the network

03

Withstand Verification

Verification of withstand capability: Basic Insulation Level (BIL) and Switching Impulse Level (SIL)

04

Protective Margins

Protective margin calculations for transformers, cables, GIS, and switchgear

05

Shielding Effectiveness

Evaluation of shielding effectiveness for overhead lines and substations

06

Earthing Arrangements

Assessment of cable screen earthing and bonding arrangements

Applicable Standards

  • 01

    IEC 60071

    Insulation coordination for equipment within AC systems — procedures and principles

  • 02

    IEEE C62 Series

    IEEE Guide for the Application of Metal-Oxide Surge Arresters

Typical Applications

Insulation coordination studies are essential for substations at all voltage levels, GIS installations, cable-overhead line interfaces, transformer terminals, and wind/solar plant collector systems.

Substations GIS Renewables

Benefits

Prevents premature equipment failure caused by inadequately specified insulation

Optimises surge arrester specification, avoiding both over- and under-protection

Reduces insurance premiums and lifecycle maintenance costs

Produces an audit-ready insulation coordination schedule for regulatory submission

Why We Are the Best for Insulation
Coordination Studies in India

India's high-voltage network — spanning 765 kV UHV lines, 400 kV interstate corridors, and dense urban GIS substations — presents a uniquely challenging insulation environment. The combination of high isokeraunic levels in many regions, mixed cable-overhead line topologies, and the rapid proliferation of GIS technology means that insulation coordination errors carry severe financial consequences.

Our engineers bring specific expertise in IEC 60071 methodology applied to Indian network conditions, including accurate lightning ground flash density (GFD) mapping, soil resistivity data integration, and arrester energy absorption analysis for long cable sections. We do not use conservative generic assumptions — every model parameter is justified against site-specific data.

  • Advanced PSCAD surge propagation modelling with frequency-dependent transmission line models
  • Site-specific lightning threat assessment using Indian Meteorological Department (IMD) isokeraunic data
  • Arrester energy duty calculations validated against manufacturer EMTP characterisation data
  • Expertise in both AIS and GIS substation insulation coordination, including mixed technology installations
  • Studies accepted by major EPC contractors, transformer OEMs, and independent engineers for project financing

Equipment failure is never just a technical event — it carries warranty disputes, outage penalties, and reputational consequences. Our insulation coordination studies are engineered to eliminate that risk before the first switch is closed.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about Insulation Coordination Studies

An insulation coordination study is a systematic engineering process used to select the optimum insulation levels for electrical equipment. It ensures that substations, transformers, and switchgear can safely withstand transient overvoltages caused by lightning strikes, switching operations, and temporary power frequency fluctuations (TOV) without failing.