Transformer Cooling Systems
According to Rating
Transformers generate heat due to core losses
(hysteresis and eddy currents) and copper losses (I²R losses in windings).
Efficient cooling is essential to maintain performance, extend lifespan, and
prevent insulation failure. The choice of cooling system largely depends on
transformer rating (kVA/MVA) and application.
1. Classification of Transformer Cooling Systems
Cooling
systems in transformers are classified mainly into Oil-immersed
(liquid-cooled) and Dry-type (air-cooled).
Type |
Full Form / Description |
Typical Ratings |
Remarks |
ONAN |
Oil
Natural Air Natural |
Up to
5–10 MVA |
Oil
circulates naturally, cooled by air; simplest system. |
ONAF |
Oil
Natural Air Forced |
5–50
MVA |
Oil
circulates naturally; additional air fans increase cooling. |
OFAN |
Oil
Forced Air Natural |
20–100
MVA |
Oil is
pumped mechanically; air cooling is natural. |
OFAF |
Oil
Forced Air Forced |
50–250
MVA |
Both
oil and air are circulated by pumps/fans; high cooling efficiency. |
OFWF |
Oil
Forced Water Forced |
>100
MVA |
Oil is
circulated and cooled via water-cooled heat exchangers; used in large power
transformers. |
Dry-type
AN |
Air
Natural |
Up to
2–3 MVA |
Air-cooled;
used indoors or environmentally sensitive areas. |
Dry-type
AF |
Air
Forced |
3–10
MVA |
Fans
improve cooling; no oil required, fire-safe. |
2. Cooling Systems in Detail
2.1 Oil-Immersed Transformers
a) ONAN
(Oil Natural Air Natural)
- Rating: Up to 5–10 MVA
- Mechanism: Oil circulates due to
natural convection; heat dissipates to the tank walls and air.
- Figure:
·
Windings
→ Hot Oil → Tank Walls → Air → Ambient
- Applications: Distribution transformers,
small power transformers.
- Advantages: Simple, reliable, low
maintenance.
- Limitations: Limited cooling capacity;
unsuitable for high ratings.
b) ONAF
(Oil Natural Air Forced)
- Rating: 5–50 MVA
- Mechanism: Oil rises naturally; air
fans increase heat dissipation.
- Advantages: 1.5–2× better cooling than
ONAN.
- Applications: Industrial transformers,
moderate rating power transformers.
c) OFAF /
OFWF (Oil Forced Air/Water Forced)
- Rating: 50–250+ MVA
- Mechanism: Oil is pumped; heat is
removed by air or water.
- Applications: Large power transformers,
grid substations.
- Advantages: Highest cooling efficiency;
can operate at full load continuously.
- Figures:
- OFAF: Up to 2–3× ONAN cooling
- OFWF: Up to 5× ONAN cooling
2.2 Dry-Type Transformers (Air-Cooled)
a) AN
(Air Natural)
- Rating: Up to 2–3 MVA
- Mechanism: Heat is transferred
directly to ambient air.
- Applications: Indoor installations,
hazardous areas (no oil risk).
b) AF
(Air Forced)
- Rating: 3–10 MVA
- Mechanism: Fans improve heat removal;
allows higher loading.
- Advantages: Fire-safe, low maintenance;
suitable for indoor use.
3. Typical Transformer Rating vs Cooling System
Table
Transformer Rating |
Cooling System Used |
Remarks |
< 5
MVA |
ONAN /
Dry-type AN |
Small
distribution transformers |
5–50
MVA |
ONAF /
Dry-type AF |
Industrial
& medium power transformers |
50–250
MVA |
OFAF /
OFWF |
Large
power transformers |
>
250 MVA |
OFWF |
Ultra-high
rating, grid-level transformers |
4. Best Cooling System
- Best cooling system: Oil Forced Water Forced
(OFWF)
- Reason: Maximum heat dissipation
efficiency; suitable for continuous full-load operation.
- Typical Use: Ultra-high rating power
transformers (≥100 MVA) in substations.
- Trade-offs: Higher cost, complex
maintenance, water availability required.
5. Summary
- Cooling depends primarily on
transformer rating.
- Small transformers → natural
oil/air cooling.
- Medium transformers → forced
air or oil circulation.
- Large transformers →
oil/water forced systems.
- Dry-type transformers are
safer for indoor and hazardous environments but limited to lower ratings.
- Efficiency & reliability
increase
with forced oil/water systems.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.