| • Science | • People | • Locations | • Timeline |
| Contents | ||
DC transmission remains the exception, rather than the rule, in power transmission. There are environments where HVDC is the conventional solution, such as in submarine cables and in interconnecting unsynchronized AC systems, but for the bulk of situations AC transmission remains dominant.
Early attempts at transmission used direct current. However, early in the development of electrical power, AC came to dominate as a means of interconnection between generation plants and machinery. The principal advantage of AC is the possibility of using transformers to efficiently transform voltage used in power transmission. With the development of efficient AC machines, such as the induction motor, AC transmission became the norm (see War of Currents).
The ability to transform voltages is an important economic and technical consideration as, whilst high voltages are harder to manipulate and more dangerous, the lower currents required with high voltage transmission for any given level power lead to high voltage transmission requiring smaller cables, and less loss of power in the form of heat. Transmission can also be limited by peak voltage - a DC line can operate at the same peak voltage as an AC line while carrying significantly more power under this limit. Therefore, with high voltages being optimal for bulk transmission, and lower voltages for industrial and domestic utilisation, the ability of AC to be effectively transformed in voltage a number of times during transmission led it to become, and remain, the dominant means of electrical power transmission.
No equivalent of the transformer exists for direct current, so the manipulation of DC voltages is considerably more complex.
Despite alternating-current being the dominant mode for electric power transmission, in a number of applications HVDC is often the preferred option.
Long undersea cables have a high capacitanceCapacitance is the ability of a capacitor to store potential difference or voltage for a given amount of stored charge. The SI unit of capacitance is the farad. where C is the capacitance, measured in farads Q is the charge, measured in coulombs V is the. This causes AC power to be lost extremely quickly in reactiveIn the analysis of an alternating-current electrical circuit (for example a RLC series circuit), reactance is the imaginary part of impedance, and is caused by the presence of inductors or capacitors in the circuit. Reactance is denoted by the symbol X an and dielectricMost generally, a dielectric is an insulator, a substance that is highly resistant to flow of electric current. Layers of such substances are commonly inserted into capacitors to improve their performance, and the term dielectric refers specifically to th losses, even on cables of a modest length. HVDC can carry more power per conductorIn science and engineering, conductors are materials that contain movable charges of electricity. When an electric potential difference is impressed across separate points on a conductor, an electric current between those points appears in accordance with, because for a given power rating the constant voltage in a DC line is lower than the peak voltage in an AC line. This voltage determines the insulation thickness and conductor spacing. This allows existing wires and ways to be used to carry more power into an area of high power consumption, which can lower costs.