KEPCO tests commercial operation of power transmission with superconducting coaxial cables

By Lim Chang-won Posted : June 24, 2022, 15:08 Updated : June 24, 2022, 15:08

[Courtesy of KEPCO]

SEOUL -- South Korea's state utility embarked on the installation of a community-friendly, cost-effective power platform to bring superconducting transmission lines and substations into commercial operation by using superconducting coaxial cables for the first time in the world. 

A ground-breaking ceremony chaired by Korea Electric Power Corp. (KEPCO) took place on June 24 in the northern border city of Paju to demonstrate the commercial operation of a platform for urban power supply using 23 kilovolts (kV) superconducting coaxial cables for completion in December 2023.

The project is to establish a superconducting station between two substations and supply electricity to nearby areas by connecting them with superconducting cables that remain below minus 200 degrees Celsius. After installing a small superconducting station, which is about one-tenth of an existing substation, power is supplied by connecting the outer substation through a 23kV underground coaxial cable.

Superconducting cable uses superconductivity where electric resistance becomes 0 at an extremely low temperature to transmit electric power. The direct current type will be used for underground cables for high-power transmission and high-capacity, long-distance transmission. Alternating current can be synchronized with electric power systems.
    
The superconducting platform reduces the size of substations and construction costs. "A successful demonstration project will enable eco-friendly power facilities without large-scale civil engineering work in the city center," KEPCO's power research center head Lee Jung-ho said in a statement. 

The platform is aimed at building large-scale power facilities outside the city center and small superconducting platforms in the city center to connect them with superconducting cables.

 KEPCO has tested the commercial operation of high-temperature superconducting (HTS) power cables In Shingal, 30km south of Seoul, to connect two substations with a 23 kV cable over a distance of one kilometer. As a next step, the company would apply HTS cables to enhance the power supply reliability of 154 kV radial substations. 

For KEPCO's superconducting platform business, LS Cable & System, a major cable maker in South Korea, has developed a 23 kV superconducting coaxial cable that can transmit large amounts of power with little power losses during power transmission and generate no electromagnetic waves.

South Korea has designated ultra-high-pressure power cables as core national technology. In February 2022, LS C&S teamed up with the state-funded Korea Electrotechnology Research Institute (KERI) for joint research in high-voltage direct current transmission (HVDC) that converts alternating current into high-voltage DC. HVDC cables are more advantageous for long-distance transmission and have less loss than conventional AC transmission. 




 
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