The purpose of
a grounding transformer bank or three-phase grounding transformer is to ground
the neutral of an otherwise isolated-neutral system.
The most common
configurations are wye-delta and interconnected-star or zig-zag.
If the system
voltage is symmetrical, the line-to-neutral voltages are balanced, and the
grounding transformer takes just sufficient current to excite it.
If there is a
fault or an unbalanced load in the system, the line-to-neutral voltages are no
longer balanced, and co-phasal currents, of the same magnitude, may flow in the
transformer phases. These currents are the zero-sequence components. In the
zig-zag connection, the zero-sequence currents produce no net magnetization of
the iron core, because they flow in opposite directions in each leg and only
see the low leakage impedance of the coils.
The grounding
transformers offer a much smaller impedance to zero-sequence currents than to
the exciting currents in a balanced system, providing a low impedance route to
ground and keeping the neutral at ground potential.
Under a
line-to-ground fault, the grounding transformers will allow let a suitably
large fault current to activate the protection schemes. Grounding transformers
also allow the flow of triple-harmonics to equalize the voltages in some
transformer connections.