Designing Efficient Transmission Lines: Key Considerations and Best Practices

Types of Transmission Lines: Overhead vs. Underground Explained

Overview

  • Transmission lines move high-voltage electric power from generation plants to substations and distribution networks. Two primary types are overhead and underground lines; each has distinct advantages, limitations, costs, and use cases.

Overhead transmission lines

  • Construction: Conductors (usually aluminum or aluminum-steel) suspended on towers or poles with insulators; multiple circuits and ground wires often used.
  • Typical voltages: From tens of kV up to 765 kV and above for long-distance high-capacity lines.
  • Advantages:
    • Lower installation cost per mile compared with underground.
    • Easier and faster to inspect, maintain, and repair.
    • Better natural cooling (air) allowing higher current capacity for a given conductor.
    • Simpler to route across varied terrain and to expand.
  • Disadvantages:
    • Visually intrusive and can impact landscapes.
    • Vulnerable to weather (wind, ice, lightning) and vegetation-related faults.
    • Higher outage rates and more frequent maintenance.
    • Audible noise and electromagnetic field (EMF) exposure concerns near lines.
  • Typical uses: Long-distance high-voltage transmission, rural and remote routes, where cost and access matter.

Underground transmission lines

  • Construction: Conductors insulated and placed inside ducts, conduits, or directly buried; insulation types include cross-linked polyethylene (XLPE) or fluid-filled/PFA for very high voltages; may require cooling and specialized joints/terminations.
  • Typical voltages: Commonly up to several hundred kV; very high-voltage underground systems exist but are more complex.
  • Advantages:
    • Lower visual impact; preserve urban and sensitive landscapes.
    • Reduced exposure to weather and vegetation-caused outages — higher reliability in many urban settings.
    • Lower audible noise and fewer EMF concerns at ground level when properly designed.
  • Disadvantages:
    • Much higher installation and materials cost (ducting, insulation, cooling systems).
    • More expensive and slower to repair; faults require excavation and specialized crews.
    • Higher thermal constraints due to limited cooling — reduced current-carrying capacity for same conductor size, or need for larger conductors/cooling systems.
    • Complex jointing and termination technology, especially at high voltages.
  • Typical uses: Urban areas, environmentally sensitive regions, underwater crossings, short high-density corridors, and where right-of-way is restricted.

Technical and operational differences

  • Thermal behavior: Overhead lines dissipate heat to air; underground lines must manage heat in soil or ducts, limiting continuous current capacity or requiring larger cables or forced cooling.
  • Fault detection & repair: Overhead faults often visible and quicker to access; underground faults need specialized locating equipment and excavation, increasing downtime and cost.
  • Electrical characteristics: Capacitance and charging currents are higher for underground cables (closer conductor spacing and insulation), affecting reactive power flow and requiring compensation over long runs.
  • EMF and safety: Both types must meet clearance and safety regulations; underground cables confine fields better, but nearby buried metallic structures can affect behavior.

Cost comparison (high-level)

  • Overhead: Lower upfront capital cost; lower per-mile cost for construction and right-of-way; higher long-term outage and maintenance exposure.
  • Underground: Capital cost typically 3–10× overhead (varies widely by route, voltage, and soil/urban conditions); lower visual and environmental impact; possibly lower long-term outage costs in some settings.

Decision factors for choosing type

  • Urban vs. rural setting and right-of-way availability
  • Visual and environmental constraints (parks, historic areas)
  • Cost and budget constraints
  • Reliability requirements and exposure to weather hazards
  • Line voltage, distance, and corridor length (long HVDC or extra-high-voltage AC lines often overhead except specific segments)
  • Regulatory, permitting, and land-use considerations
  • Maintenance logistics and lifecycle cost analysis

Short guidance for planners

  1. Use overhead for long-distance, rural, or cost-sensitive routes.
  2. Use underground in dense urban areas, for short crossings, or where visual/environmental impact is unacceptable.
  3. For mixed corridors, consider hybrid approaches (overhead mainline with undergrounded segments at crossings or through cities).
  4. Model thermal, reactive power, and lifecycle costs early; include accessibility and repair scenarios in reliability planning.

If you want, I can provide a concise cost-estimate example, a table comparing specific attributes, or a checklist for converting an overhead segment to underground.

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *