Learn why more than 250 Electric Power Companies have selected CTC Global's patented ACCC Conductor to improve the efficiency, capacity, reliability and resilience of the electric power grid, worldwide
2. CTC Global Corporation & Manufacturing Partners
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• Headquarters in Irvine, California
• ~250 Employees based in Irvine
• 3 Core Prod. Facilities US, China, Indonesia
• R&D began in 2003
• Trial Lines Installed in 2004
• Commercially Deployed in 2005
• ISO Certified Production since 2006
• 25 Conductor Manufacturing Partners
• 8 Hardware Suppliers
CTC Global Factory tour video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V1_4J41fbQM
4. CTC Global Resume
USA
China
England
Poland
Spain
Scotland
Portugal
Mexico
Chile
Qatar
Indonesia
Belgium
Brazil
Kosovo
Germany
South Africa
South Korea
Russia
Costa Rica
Argentina
Romania
Pakistan
Montenegro
Namibia
Sweden*
India
Columbia
Congo
Ireland
Mozambique
Netherlands
Nigeria
Vietnam
Australia
Malaysia
Croatia
Kazakhstan
Panama
Estonia
Laos
Serbia
New Zealand
Paraguay
Bangladesh
Turkey
Egypt*
Slovenia
Hungary
Nepal
Jordan
Not
• >250 Utilities Served
• >400 Installation Crews Trained
• >80,000 km of ACCC in Service*
• >700 Projects Completed* (50+ in the works)
• 11 kV to 800 kV Lines AC & DC
• 50 Countries Served – in all climates and terrains
• 42 Certified Master Installers
• 24 x 7 Technical Support
*Not including ACCC produced in China or Indonesia
5. Its hybrid carbon fiber core is 70% lighter and 50% stronger than steel. Its has a
coefficient-of-thermal-expansion about 10 times less than steel. This allows the
use of 28% more aluminum which helps increase capacity, improve efficiency &
mitigate thermal sag.
High Performance Conductor for a Modern Grid
ACCC Conductor
6. ACCC® Conductor…
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• Increases the capacity and efficiency of new and existing transmission lines
• Carbon and glass fiber core provides very high strength (310 to 375 ksi)
• Lighter weight core allows 28% more aluminum without weight penalty
• Very low coefficient of thermal expansion reduces thermal sag
• Composite core resists corrosion and cyclic load fatigue
• Added aluminum content decreases electrical resistance and line losses by ~ 30%
• Core is produced to ASTM Standard B987 / B987M – 17
• Available through 25 authorized manufacturing partners
7. Broad Range of Applications
• Reconductor Projects – increase corridor capacity, reduce environmental
impact, permitting, and capital costs by retaining existing towers
• Rebuild Projects – When its determined that existing structures are too
old or when storm hardening is required
• New Lines – reduce upfront capital costs by increasing spans between
fewer and/or shorter structures
• Generation Tie Lines – increase asset efficiency and investment returns
• Long Span Applications – enables critical long spans with high strength,
reduced sag and excellent damping
• EHV / UHV (and DC) Voltages – excellent core stability and surface
smoothness enable bundling and decreased corona
• Mountainous Terrain – outstanding strength, toughness and field
experience help installations in difficult and mountainous terrain
• Highly Corrosive Environments – composite core is impervious to
corrosion in salt air and heavy polluted industrial environments
Proven advantages for many project types
8. The Substantial Path to Deployment
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1. Developed & Tested the Composite Core
2. Tested Electrical Properties of the Conductor
3. Developed & Tested Ancillary Hardware
4. Assessed Environmental Exposure and Longevity
5. Evaluated Conventional Installation Procedures
6. Commercially Deployed in 2005
7. ISO Certified in 2006
In collaboration with several International
Utilities and laboratories, CTC Global:
Ongoing Research in Conjunction with:
9. Testing and Validation
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Core Testing:
2.1.1 Tensile Testing
2.1.2 Flexural, Bending & Shear Tests
2.1.3 Sustained Load Tests
2.1.4 Tg Tests
2.1.5 CTE Measurements
2.1.6 Shear Testing
2.1.7 Impact and Crush Testing
2.1.8 Torsion Testing
2.1.9 Notched Degradation Testing
2.1.10 Moisture Resistance Testing
2.1.11 Long Term Thermal Testing
2.1.12 Sustained Load Thermal Testing
2.1.13 Cyclic Thermal Testing
2.1.14 Specific Heat Capacity Testing
2.1.15 High Temperature Short Duration
2.1.16 High Temperature Core Testing
2.1.17 Thermal Oxidation Testing
2.1.18 Brittle Fracture Testing
2.1.19 UV Testing
2.1.20 Salt Fog Exposure Tests
2.1.21 Creep Tests
2.1.22 Stress Strain Testing
2.1.24 Micrographic Analysis
2.1.25 Dye Penetrant Testing
2.1.26 High Temperature Shear Testing
2.1.27 Low Temperature Shear Testing
Mechanical Conductor Testing:
2.2.28 Stress Strain Testing
2.2.29 Creep Testing
2.2.30 Aeolian Vibration Testing
2.2.31 Galloping Tests
2.2.32 Self Damping Tests
2.2.33 Radial Impact and Crush Tests
2.2.34 Turning Angle Tests
2.2.35 Torsion Tests
2.2.36 High Temperature Sag Tests
2.2.37 High Temperature Sustained Load
2.2.38 High Temperature Cyclic Load Tests
2.2.39 Cyclic Ice Load Tests
2.2.40 Sheave Wheel Tests
2.2.41 Ultimate Strength Tests
2.2.42 Cyclic Thermo-Mechanical Testing
2.2.43 Combined Cyclic Load Testing
2.2.44 Conductor Comparison Testing
Electrical Conductor Testing:
2.3.45 Resistivity Testing
2.3.46 Power Loss Comparison Testing
2.3.47 Ampacity
2.3.48 EMF Measurements
2.3.49 Impedance Comparison Testing
2.3.50 Corona Testing
2.3.51 Radio Noise Testing
2.3.52 Short Circuit Testing
2.3.53 Lightning Strike Testing
2.3.54 Ultra High Voltage AC & DC Testing
Systems & Hardware Testing:
2.4.55 Current Cycle Testing
2.4.56 Sustained Load Testing
2.4.57 Ultimate Assembly Strength Testing
2.4.58 Salt Fog Emersion Testing
2.4.60 Static Heat Tests
2.4.61 Suspension Clamp Testing
2.4.62 Thermo-Mechanical Testing
2.4.63 Cyclic Load Testing
2.4.64 EPRI Longevity Assessment (1,500 cycles)
Field Testing:
2.5.64 Ambient Temperature
2.5.65 Tension, Sag, and Clearance
2.5.66 Conductor Temperature
2.5.67 Electric Current
2.5.68 Wind Speed and Direction
2.5.69 Solar Radiation
2.5.70 Rainfall
2.5.71 Ice Buildup
2.5.72 Splice Resistance
2.5.73 Infrared Measurements
2.5.74 Corona Observations
2.5.75 Electric and Magnetic Fields
2.5.76 Wind and Ice Load Measurements
2.5.77 Vibration Monitoring
2.5.78 Typhoon Test
US / UK / France / Canada / Mexico / China / Brazil / Chile / Belgium / Indonesia / Germany
10. How ACCC Compares
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 220 240 260
CableSag(Inches)
Temperature (C)
ACCC
GAP
Invar
ACCR
ACSS
ACSR
Comparison testing performed by Hydro One on a 65 meter span, 1600 amps, Drake size
Cooler operating temperatures underscore improved efficiency and reduced losses
12. ACCC Conductor Resists Cyclic Load Fatigue
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ACSS ACCC
After Sheave Test, 100 Million Cycles of Vibration, 100 Thousand Cycles of Galloping, and Tensile Test
Testing performed by American
Electric Power (AEP) proved the
ACCC conductor’s superior resistance
to vibration and cyclic load fatigue.
(using the same conductor sample)
13. 13
ACCC Can Handle N-1 Conditions (215°C testing)
ACCC & Hardware subjected to High Temperature Cyclic Tests
17. Rifle Strike
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Damaged core kept conductor in
the air despite direct hit from rifle
Lab testing demonstrated retained
strength after core compromised
ACCC Drake size core utilizes more than 675,000
individual carbon fibers and more than 400,000 glass
fibers. The thermoset epoxy matrix serves to help the
fibers share applied loads. Undamaged fibers offer
load path redundancy.
19. Expanded Product Family
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ACCC
Standard ACCC uses 310 ksi composite core and 6 ksi Type 1350-O fully
annealed aluminum. Carbon to glass ratio: ~50/50. CTE of core is 1.6 x
10-6/OC. (~60,000 km in service) Cost is ~2 x ACSR
ACCC ULS
ACCC ULS uses 375 ksi composite core and 6 ksi Type 1350-O fully
annealed aluminum. The difference is that the grade of carbon is
slightly higher and the carbon to glass ratio: ~70/30. CTE of core is 0.6 x
10-6/OC (~5,000 km in service). Generally used for long spans or where
heavy ice loads are anticipated. Cost is ~2.5 x ACSR
ACCC AZR
ACCC AZR uses 310 or 375 ksi composite core with one or more
layers of 22 ksi Type AT3 Aluminum Zirconium alloy strands. (See
ASTM Standard B-941 or IEC Standard 62004). This is a new
product developed for use in areas subject to extreme ice and/or
for long spans. Cost is ~2.1 – 2.6 x ACSR
20. To Compare Any Conductor (New online version of CCP)
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Weblink: ccp.ctcglobal.com
21. Installation Highlights
• ACCC follows IEEE 524 guidelines
• Conventional tools, techniques and
equipment are used – no special
crews or equipment needed
• Guidelines includes a detailed listing
of industry standard tools and
equipment by conductor size
• 4 hour crew training focuses on
product-specific guidelines developed
by CTC (includes proper pulley sizes,
etc.)
• Guidelines emphasize “Do’s” and
“Don’ts” based on global field
experience
• Guidelines available via CTC website
and through Certified Master
Installers and on line videos
22. ACCC Hardware
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Very simple to install – only one compression die required
Special
equipment
Animated demo on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QD7_7t4SeVY
23. Standard Tools & Equipment
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• All equipment is
standard and readily
available
• Hardware is available
from 8 international
suppliers
• CTC provides support
and assistance (and the
anti core slip bug
pictured below)
25. Description: 240 circuit miles, 345 kV line, double bundle
Project: replace 1,440 miles of ACSR conductor with ACCC
Objectives
• Improve reliability (less sag and corrosion)
• Increased capacity to serve growth
• Retain existing structures – to reduce costs
• Eliminate down time with Live Line Reconductoring
Additional benefits received by AEP
• Project completed eight months ahead of schedule
• Reduced line losses by 30%
Saving $15 million/yr. (300,000 MWh at $50)
Reducing CO2 emissions by ~200,000 metric
tons per year (= 34,000 cars off the road)
Freeing up ~34 MW of generation
This project won EEI Transmission Project of the Year - 2016
Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aPaNHawIdFA&feature=youtu.be
AEP Energized Reconductor Project Example
26. ACCC Technical Support & Resources:
• Application Engineering Support
• Pre Bid Assistance
• Stringing Plan Review & Guidance
• Equipment Evaluation
• Installation Training
• Master Installer Training
• On-Site Field Service & Support
• Emergency Response Support
• Outstanding Product Warrantee
Please leverage our experience. We want you to succeed
Good planning, training and equipment selection is key to project success
27. CTC Global Corporation
2026 McGaw Avenue
Irvine, CA 92614 USA
+1(949)428-8500
www.ctcglobal.com
Questions?
New 50 km 275 kV triple bundle
ACCC conductor generation tie line
energized in Malaysia July, 2017