Study on Shaking Table Test and Vulnerability Analysis of 220 kV Indoor Substation in High-Intensity Areas

This study investigates the seismic performance of the V3.0 220 kV standard-designed substation of the Southern Power Grid, located in a high-intensity seismic zone, with a focus on the application of seismic isolation technology. Seismic isolation and structural analysis were conducted and shaking...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jie Feng, Liuhuo Wang, Yueqing Chen, Xiaohui Wu, Dayang Wang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-05-01
Series:Infrastructures
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2412-3811/10/5/119
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:This study investigates the seismic performance of the V3.0 220 kV standard-designed substation of the Southern Power Grid, located in a high-intensity seismic zone, with a focus on the application of seismic isolation technology. Seismic isolation and structural analysis were conducted and shaking table tests were performed on both isolated and non-isolated structural models. A total of 40 tests were carried out using three levels of ground motion intensity (i.e., 140 gal, 400 gal, and 800 gal) and in three directions (unidirectional, bidirectional, and triaxial). The dynamic characteristics, seismic response, and isolation effectiveness were evaluated. Results indicate that the test models exhibit strong agreement with theoretical and numerical predictions, with an average frequency deviation of 10.98%. The fundamental period of the isolated structure was extended by a factor of 2.33 compared to the non-isolated configuration. As the peak ground acceleration increased, structural frequency decreased, and the period increased. The isolated structure showed a lower first-period growth rate (4.82%) than the non-isolated structure (15.38%). Even under 800 gal excitations, the isolated structure remained within the elastic range. Seismic isolation significantly reduced structural response, with a control effectiveness exceeding 50%, enabling a one-degree reduction in seismic design intensity. A vulnerability analysis based on 200 simulated earthquake cases revealed that the isolated structure exhibited lower failure probabilities across four performance states. At 600 gal PGA, the failure probability in the LS3 state was reduced by 27.8%. These findings confirm the effectiveness and reliability of seismic isolation design for substations in high seismic intensity regions.
ISSN:2412-3811