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HVDC Auxiliary Control for Valve Health & Timing

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This page explains how HVDC auxiliary control builds a dedicated health and monitoring layer around converter valves, combining isolated measurements, optical links, valve-drive supervision and redundant clocks to improve reliability, diagnostics and maintenance without taking over the core protection or main control functions.

What this page solves

In many HVDC projects, most design effort goes into the main converter, protection relays and PMUs. Auxiliary control around the valve hall is treated as a side board, which often leads to scattered valve health data, poorly supervised optical links and unknown clock quality until an incident happens.

This page focuses on the auxiliary control system that keeps the valve hall observable and explainable: monitoring valve and high-voltage submodule status, keeping isolated sensing and optical links online in all operating modes, and maintaining redundant clocks and event logs even when the main power loop is stopped or in commissioning.

To avoid overlap with other topics, this page deliberately covers health and availability, not core protection, not billing metering and not synchrophasor analytics.

  • This page is not a protection relay tutorial — trip decisions belong to the Protection Relay page.
  • This page is not about synchrophasor calculations — PMU and IEEE C37.118 live on the Synchrophasor page.
  • This page is not a generic HV isolation design guide — insulation rules sit under HV Isolation & Sensing.
  • This page is not about grid-tie control loops — those are discussed on the PV Inverter / STATCOM pages.

This page is for you if:

  • Valve health, optics and clocks need a clear place in the HVDC system architecture.
  • Devices and modules for isolated sensing, optical links and clock trees in converter stations must be selected and compared.
  • Specifications or RFQs for an “HVDC auxiliary control board” need concrete hooks instead of vague bullet points.
HVDC system and where auxiliary control sits Block diagram showing AC Grid A, Converter Station A, an HVDC link, Converter Station B and AC Grid B. Each station contains main converter, protection and relays, metering and PMU, and an auxiliary control block highlighted, with arrows from auxiliary control to the valve hall, time sync and SCADA or maintenance. HVDC system with auxiliary control AC Grid A AC Grid B Converter Station A Main converter Protection & relays Metering & PMU Auxiliary control Converter Station B Main converter Protection & relays Metering & PMU Auxiliary control HVDC link Valve hall & stacks Time sync (PTP / GNSS) SCADA / maintenance Auxiliary control blocks in each converter station connect the valve hall, time sync and SCADA.

Core building blocks of HVDC auxiliary control

An HVDC auxiliary control system can be viewed as four core domains working together: optical links that bridge the insulation barrier, isolated measurements that capture valve and support-system behavior, valve drive monitoring that tracks gate health and events, and redundant clocks that keep timing stable for all of the above. Each domain pulls in different IC families and has its own design hooks.

The following overview highlights what each domain watches, the typical performance targets and the IC categories that usually appear in converter station designs. Later sections expand these blocks in more detail, but this grid can act as a quick map when planning or reviewing an auxiliary control stack.

Optical links

Carries digitized measurements and health bits between the valve hall and control room across the insulation barrier, while rejecting ground potential differences and EMI.

  • Watches: framed data streams, link alarms, error counters.
  • Specs: 10–500 Mbps, tens to hundreds of meters, low BER over temperature.
  • IC roles: SerDes, optical modules, link diagnostics and supervision.

Links to: Industrial Ethernet & TSN, Substation IED, HV Isolation & Sensing.

Isolated measurements

Capture valve currents, module voltages, temperatures and cooling status under high dV/dt conditions without compromising insulation coordination or signal integrity.

  • Watches: electrical and thermal behavior near the valves.
  • Specs: high CMTI, 20–200 kS/s, 0.1–0.5 % accuracy, stable over temperature.
  • IC roles: isolated amplifiers, ΣΔ modulators, ADC front-ends and sensor interfaces.

Links to: HV Isolation & Sensing, Protection Relay, Power Quality & Monitoring.

Valve drive monitoring

Observes gate drive status and lifetime indicators so misfires, stuck-on or stuck-off behavior and repeated retries become visible instead of hidden in the valve hall.

  • Watches: gate faults, undervoltage, thermal stress, retry counts.
  • Specs: microsecond-scale detection, robust digital isolation, clear event latches.
  • IC roles: gate driver monitors, digital isolators, comparators and latch logic.

Links to: Protection Relay, HVDC valve drive boards, Asset Health monitoring.

Redundant clocks & time distribution

Provides a stable local time base for auxiliary controllers, isolated converters and SerDes links, with redundancy and holdover when external time references are disturbed.

  • Watches: reference health, drift, switchover events and jitter margins.
  • Specs: low-jitter outputs, ppm-level stability, controlled failover and holdover.
  • IC roles: OCXO/TCXO modules, PLLs, clock generators, clock mux and supervisors.

Links to: Substation Time Sync, PMU / Synchrophasor, Industrial Ethernet & TSN.

Core auxiliary control domains Diagram with a central auxiliary control block and four surrounding domains: optical links, isolated measurements, valve drive monitoring and redundant clocks, each with example IC roles. Core auxiliary control domains Auxiliary control Health, visibility and timing Optical links Valve drive monitoring Isolated measurements Redundant clocks SerDes & optics ΣΔ / iso amplifiers Gate driver monitors, sensors PLLs, clock modules Auxiliary control is built from optical links, isolated measurements, valve monitoring and redundant clocks.

Isolated measurement chain for HVDC valves

HVDC valves require a dedicated isolated measurement chain on the auxiliary side, separate from the primary protection path. This chain captures valve currents, arm and module voltages, capacitor voltages, cooling system status and cabinet temperatures with a focus on stability, repeatability and long-term trend visibility rather than ultra-fast trip decisions.

Typical architectures combine shunts or CTs with isolated amplifiers or sigma-delta modulators for current, high-voltage dividers with isolation amplifiers or ΣΔ converters for valve and module voltages, and standard ADCs for cooling and auxiliary sensors. Key parameters include common-mode transient immunity, linearity, temperature drift and latency, which are tuned for clean steady-state data and predictable timing.

The primary protection chain often measures similar quantities but prioritizes speed and robustness for trip decisions. The auxiliary measurement chain prioritizes accurate baselines, long-term trends and health indicators, even if that means slightly lower bandwidth or higher latency.

Quantity Front-end sensor Isolation / ADC Sampling target
Valve current Shunt or CT located close to the valve or arm. ΣΔ modulator or isolated amplifier feeding a shared ADC on the auxiliary side. 20–200 kS/s per channel, with high CMTI and predictable group delay.
Valve / module voltage High-voltage divider sized for continuous operation and acceptable power loss. Isolation amplifier or ΣΔ converter with suitable input range and linearity. 10–50 kS/s per point, tuned for accurate steady-state and slow dynamics.
Cooling and auxiliary status Temperature and flow sensors, pump and fan feedback, pressure and level switches. Standard ADCs on the low-voltage side through isolated I/Os or current-loop receivers. 1–10 samples per second, optimised for long-term trend and alarm thresholds.
Isolated measurement chain for HVDC valves Block diagram showing current, voltage and temperature or flow sensing feeding an isolation and ADC block, which then drives an auxiliary measurement bus into the auxiliary controller. Isolated measurement chain for HVDC valves Current sense shunt / CT Voltage sense divider Temp / flow & cooling Isolation & ADC ΣΔ / isolated amps shared converters & filters Auxiliary measurement bus currents, voltages, cooling data Auxiliary controller trend & health processing Current, voltage and cooling measurements converge through isolated converters into a shared auxiliary measurement bus.

Valve drive monitoring & event logging

Valve drive monitoring and structured event logging make misfires, stuck conditions and repeated retries visible instead of hidden inside the valve hall. Gate drivers, drive supplies and local sensors expose status pins and counters that auxiliary control can observe, time-stamp and store, creating a usable history for diagnostics and maintenance planning.

The resulting information supports primary protection and SCADA without taking over trip authority. Protection relays still decide when to trip; auxiliary control provides context and trends: when gates started responding slowly, when temperatures drifted upward, and when optical or drive rails caused recurrent disturbances.

Typical event types tracked by the auxiliary system include:

  • Gate not responding within a defined time window after a firing command.
  • Valve stuck-on or stuck-off indications from gate-drive diagnostics.
  • Valve or module over-temperature trends and repeated thermal warnings.
  • Excessive retries of a start or blocking sequence for a given valve group.
  • Undervoltage events on gate-drive supplies and auxiliary power rails.
  • Frequent optical link dropouts affecting valve-related communication.
Event type Detected by What auxiliary control does
Gate not responding within X µs Gate driver monitor pins, firing command logic and digital isolators. Time-stamps the event, increments a counter for the affected valve or module, classifies severity and exposes an alarm flag to SCADA.
Valve stuck-on / stuck-off indication Gate driver diagnostics outputs and status feedback lines. Logs the state change with time and operating mode, marks the module as degraded and provides status inputs to protection logic.
Valve over-temperature trend Temperature sensors on valve stacks, heatsinks and cooling paths. Records temperature trends, compares against thresholds and warning bands, tags affected stacks and forwards warnings to SCADA and CMMS.
Excessive start-sequence retries Start/stop sequence logic and retry counters inside valve-control firmware. Tracks the number of retries and timing, correlates with operating mode and logs events as early indicators of drive or supply degradation.
Repeated undervoltage on drive rails Supply monitors on gate-drive power rails and auxiliary converters. Logs undervoltage events with duration, links them to corresponding gating issues and flags rails that require investigation or redesign.
Frequent optical link dropouts Optical link diagnostics, loss-of-signal flags and error counters. Counts and time-stamps dropouts, associates them with specific valves or valve groups and marks affected intervals in the event log for later analysis.

How valve-drive events are consumed by higher-level systems:

  • SCADA uses the events for alarms, operator dashboards and trend plots that highlight deteriorating valves and cooling paths.
  • CMMS and asset-management tools use the logs to open work orders, schedule inspections and compare valve performance against vendor expectations.
  • Protection relays receive status inputs that indicate degraded or unavailable valves but retain full trip authority and their own measurement chains.
Valve drive monitoring and event logging flow Block diagram showing valve drive and sensors feeding an auxiliary controller with real-time monitoring and event log blocks, then outputs to SCADA and maintenance tools and to the protection relay as status inputs only. Valve drive monitoring and event logging Valve drive & sensors Gate drivers & status pins misfire / stuck detection Temp, lifetime & retry counters Auxiliary controller Real-time monitoring gate, rails, link health Event log & trend storage time-stamped events & counters SCADA & maintenance tools alarms, trends, work orders Protection relay status input only Valve-drive status and sensor data are monitored in real time, logged with time stamps and sent to SCADA and protection as structured information.

Redundant clocking & timing distribution

Auxiliary control in an HVDC converter station depends on a stable local time base. System clocks drive the auxiliary controller MCU or FPGA, reference clocks feed optical links and sigma-delta or ADC devices, and fan-out networks distribute timing to measurement and communication domains. Redundant clocking ensures that these functions survive failures of individual oscillators or time sources.

This section focuses on local redundancy and distribution, not on how absolute time is obtained. Station time sources such as PTP, NTP or GNSS, and synchrophasor algorithms, belong to the Substation Time Sync and PMU pages. Here the emphasis is on how to combine oscillators, PLLs and clock switches into robust local clock trees for auxiliary control.

Typical local clocking schemes

Single OCXO with simple fan-out

A single oven-controlled crystal oscillator provides a stable frequency reference that is buffered and fanned out to the auxiliary controller, optical transceivers and measurement converters. This approach keeps part count low and is easy to debug, making it attractive for smaller stations or less critical deployments, but the OCXO becomes a single point of failure.

Dual OCXO with clock switch and supervision

Two independent OCXOs feed a clock mux or switch that monitors amplitude, frequency and phase drift on the active reference. When the primary source fails or moves beyond defined limits, the switch cleanly transfers to the backup. This scheme provides real failover at the cost of additional oscillators, mux devices and supervisory logic.

OCXO with PTP-disciplined PLL

A high-quality OCXO is combined with a PTP-aware PLL or digital PLL that disciplines the oscillator using network time stamps. When PTP is available, the PLL aligns local time to the station reference; when PTP is lost, the OCXO provides holdover. This option offers strong long-term accuracy and good holdover for mixed auxiliary control, PMU and Ethernet timing, at the expense of higher configuration complexity.

Scheme Pros Cons Typical IC roles
Single OCXO Simple, low part count, easy layout and debug. Suitable where brief outages can be tolerated and maintenance access is straightforward. No redundancy; OCXO ageing or failure affects all dependent domains. Planned maintenance windows are required to replace the device. OCXO module, simple clock buffer or fan-out, optional temperature and supply monitors.
Dual OCXO + switch Provides true failover against one reference failing or drifting; planned switchover can be used for testing or calibration without downtime. Higher cost and complexity; switching must be designed to control phase hits and jitter; requires health monitoring and decision logic. Two OCXOs, clock mux or switch, clock supervisors, supply and temperature monitors, fan-out buffers.
OCXO + PTP-disciplined PLL Good long-term accuracy locked to station time, with OCXO holdover during PTP outages. Suitable for shared auxiliary, PMU and TSN clocking. Higher configuration complexity and dependence on network quality; requires PTP-aware silicon and coordination between firmware and clock devices. OCXO, DPLL or PLL with PTP input, PTP timestamp engine or NIC, fan-out buffers and clock monitors.
Redundant clocking and timing distribution Block diagram with two reference oscillators feeding a clock switch and monitor, which then fans out clocks to the auxiliary controller, optical link transceivers and measurement-chain converters. Redundant clocking and timing distribution OCXO 1 REF1 OCXO 2 / backup REF2 PTP-disciplined PLL optional long-term alignment Clock switch & monitor health check, failover, holdover Monitor Switch Aux controller system clock MCU / FPGA core timing Optical link transceivers SerDes reference clocks Measurement chain ADC / ΣΔ sampling and conversion clocks Multiple reference clocks feed a monitored switch, which fans out stable timing to auxiliary controllers, optics and measurement converters.

Reliability patterns & fail-safe / fail-operational strategies

Auxiliary control in an HVDC system sits between critical protection functions and long-term asset management. Its reliability strategy must balance fail-safe behavior, where untrustworthy data is explicitly marked as degraded, with fail-operational behavior, where monitoring and logging continue even when parts of the main converter are offline or communication paths are limited.

Fail-safe behavior means that when measurements, clocks or communication no longer meet defined quality thresholds, auxiliary control does not silently continue as if nothing happened. Instead it exposes “unknown” or “degraded” states so that protection and SCADA can fall back to conservative logic. In contrast, fail-operational behavior keeps local monitoring and logging active wherever possible, turning planned outages or disturbance periods into opportunities for diagnostics rather than blind spots.

Reliability patterns for HVDC auxiliary control

Pattern: Dual-channel health monitoring

Critical quantities such as valve current or stack temperature can be measured via two independent paths. Instead of voting for trip, auxiliary control compares the two channels over time to detect drift, offsets or intermittent faults. When the mismatch exceeds defined bands, the value is marked as suspicious and treated as degraded rather than used as a precise reference.

IC implication: multi-channel sigma-delta or ADC devices, additional isolated amplifiers or sensors, and comparison logic in the auxiliary controller to generate health flags and consistency alarms.

Pattern: Graceful degradation

When part of the auxiliary chain fails, the system does not immediately drop all monitoring. Instead, it enters a degraded mode where remaining measurements and logs stay available but are clearly marked with warnings. For example, loss of one optical link still allows local trend logging and reduced reporting through the surviving path.

IC implication: dual links or redundant controllers, mode-management logic in firmware, and the ability to mask or down-rate non-critical functions while keeping core health metrics online.

Pattern: Logging-only mode

If real-time constraints can no longer be met, auxiliary control can switch to a logging-only mode. In this state, measurements continue to be sampled and time-stamped locally, but no longer feed live control loops. SCADA and maintenance tools treat these logs as diagnostic records rather than real-time data.

IC implication: non-volatile storage for events and trends, sufficient holdover capability in local clocks, and firmware support for tagging data as historical rather than live.

Pattern: Split-brain prevention

In architectures with dual auxiliary controllers, there is a risk that both sides independently claim to be authoritative when internal communication is lost. Split-brain prevention assigns clear primary and secondary roles and defines how nodes demote themselves when arbitration signals or heartbeats are missing.

IC implication: dedicated arbitration lines, watchdogs and role-control signals between controllers, plus firmware that enforces primary/secondary roles and safely falls back to observe-only behavior when conditions are ambiguous.

Auxiliary control reliability states State-machine style diagram showing auxiliary control moving between normal, degraded, logging-only and offline states, with different data exposure levels in each state. Auxiliary control reliability states Normal operation full data & health metrics Degraded mode partial data + warnings Logging-only mode local logs, no real-time Offline no data, maintenance link or sensor fault timing or bandwidth limits controlled shutdown or failure severe self-diagnosed fault fault cleared & revalidated Data exposure in each state Normal: full live data health metrics and trends Degraded: limited data explicit warnings and flags Logging-only: historical only no real-time outputs Offline: unavailable hardware maintenance only Auxiliary control mixes fail-operational monitoring with fail-safe data quality flags so that protection and SCADA always know how much to trust its outputs.

IC roles & vendor mapping

HVDC auxiliary control for valve monitoring and health supervision depends on a set of well-defined IC roles. Each role supports a specific part of the chain: optical links across high-voltage barriers, isolated measurement for valve currents and voltages, redundant clocking, local processing and robust power supervision. This section organises these roles, maps them to major vendors and lists example part numbers that can be used as starting points for BOM and RFQ work.

The focus is on role-level mapping rather than detailed part-to-part comparisons. The goal is to help narrow a wide device catalogue down to a shortlist per function, and to show where the main IC vendors have mature offerings for HVDC auxiliary control boards.

IC role overview for HVDC auxiliary control

IC role Typical function in HVDC auxiliary control Linked sections
Isolated sigma-delta modulator / isolation amplifier Transfers shunt or CT currents and high-voltage divider voltages across insulation with high CMTI and suitable bandwidth for valve current and stack voltage measurement. Isolated measurement chain, valve drive monitoring
Digital isolator for logic, SPI and status Isolates gate-drive status, fault flags and control buses between valve-side electronics and auxiliary controller domains. Optical links, valve drive monitoring, reliability patterns
Current and voltage sensing front ends Sense valve current, submodule capacitor voltage, cooling temperature and flow, and bus conditions for trend and health analysis. Isolated measurement chain, valve drive monitoring
Optical SerDes and PHY interface Serialize digitised measurement and status streams, drive optical modules and recover data and clocks at the auxiliary controller side. Optical links for high-voltage environments
Oscillators, clock modules and PLL / clock-tree devices Provide stable time bases, redundant references and low-jitter clocks for auxiliary controller cores, optical SerDes and measurement converters. Redundant clocking & timing distribution
MCU / safety MCU / mid-range SoC Aggregate measurements and events, run health monitoring logic, manage logs, communications and state transitions between normal, degraded and logging-only modes. Valve drive monitoring & logging, reliability patterns
FPGA / CPLD / SoC FPGA Timestamp high-speed streams, implement link framing, redundancy voting and protocol bridging for valve halls and converter control rooms. Optical links, event logging and health aggregation
Isolated DC-DC converters and local power rails Generate isolated bias supplies for valve-side sensing, control-side logic, clocks and SerDes domains with appropriate creepage and EMC performance. All auxiliary control blocks, reliability patterns
Supervisors, reset & watchdog ICs, non-volatile logging Supervise supply rails and clocks, provide reset and watchdog functions, and store event logs and trend data across power cycles for diagnostics. Redundant clocking, valve drive monitoring, reliability patterns

Isolation & measurement ICs: vendor mapping and example parts

IC role Typical features Vendor examples Example part numbers
Isolated sigma-delta modulator / isolation amplifier 20–25 MHz modulator clock, 16–24 bit effective resolution, high CMTI and reinforced isolation for shunt or CT based valve current sensing and high-voltage divider measurement. TI, Analog Devices, Infineon, Microchip TI: AMC1306M25, AMC1304M25, AMC1204
ADI: AD7403, AD7401A, ADuM7703
Infineon: XENSIV TLE4972 (isolated current), ISOFACE family parts
Microchip: MCP3911, MCP3913 (for energy measurement segments)
Digital isolator for logic, PWM and SPI Multi-channel digital isolation with data rates from tens to hundreds of Mbps, high CMTI and reinforced insulation. Used for isolating gate drive status, SPI measurement buses and safety signals between valve halls and control rooms. TI, Analog Devices, Infineon, NXP, Skyworks (Silicon Labs) TI: ISO7721, ISO7742, ISO7842
ADI: ADuM1401, ADuM141E, ADuM1250 (I²C)
Infineon: 1ED/2ED EiceDRIVER isolators with logic channels
NXP: NVT/low-voltage translators for logic domains
Skyworks: Si8642, Si8660 isolation families
Current and voltage sensing front ends High-side and differential amplifiers, isolated current sensors and precision dividers for monitoring valve currents, submodule capacitor voltages, cooling system temperatures and flow rates, and bus conditions. TI, Analog Devices, Infineon, STMicroelectronics, Allegro TI: INA240, INA210, TMCS1100, TMCS1101
ADI: AD8210, AD8418
Infineon: TLI4971-AE35, TLE4972 current sensors
ST: TSC2011, TSC213
Allegro: ACS712, ACS770 (for certain bus and feeder currents)

Optical links and clocking devices

IC role Typical features Vendor examples Example part numbers
Optical SerDes and industrial PHY interface Serializer / deserializer or industrial Ethernet PHY that interfaces to optical modules, supports industrial temperature and provides diagnostics such as LOS and link quality metrics. Microchip, TI, Analog Devices, Broadcom (modules), other optical specialists Microchip: KSZ9031MNX, KSZ9563 (Ethernet switch with PHY)
TI: DP83867, DP83869 (industrial Ethernet PHY)
ADI: ADIN1300 (industrial PHY), high-speed JESD/SerDes families
Broadcom: AFBR-57xx, AFBR-79xx industrial optical modules
Oscillators and clock modules (OCXO / TCXO / MEMS) Temperature-compensated or oven-controlled oscillators with low phase noise and industrial or extended temperature ranges, used as local references for clock-tree devices and PLLs. SiTime, Renesas, Microchip, specialist timing vendors SiTime: SIT9120, SIT5358 TCXO/OCXO families
Renesas: timing modules and oscillators paired with 8T/5P clock trees
Microchip: DSC1101, DSC1123 MEMS oscillators
Clock-tree and PLL / DPLL devices Low-jitter PLLs and clock-tree devices with multiple outputs, integer and fractional dividers, and optional PTP input for disciplined operation and holdover. TI, Analog Devices, Renesas, Microchip TI: LMK04828, LMK03318
ADI: AD9545, AD9517
Renesas: 8T49N240, 5P49V6965
Microchip: ZL30250, ZL30732

Controllers, FPGAs, power and supervision ICs

IC role Typical features Vendor examples Example part numbers
MCU / safety MCU / SoC Industrial or automotive-grade temperature range, ECC on memories, watchdogs and security features. Multiple SPI, Ethernet and serial ports to connect measurement chains and communication stacks. TI, NXP, STMicroelectronics, Renesas, Microchip TI: TMS570LC4357, RM48L952, AM2434
NXP: LPC55S36, i.MX RT1176
ST: STM32H743, STM32G474, STM32MP157
Renesas: RA6M4, RX family parts for industrial control
Microchip: ATSAME70Q21, PIC32MZ EF
FPGA / CPLD / SoC FPGA Logic resources for time stamping, redundancy voting, protocol bridges and fast data-path operations, with long-term availability and industrial temperature support. AMD (Xilinx), Intel, Lattice, Microchip (Microsemi) AMD: XC7A100T, XC7K160T, XC7Z020
Intel: 10CL025, 10M50 (Cyclone 10 / MAX 10)
Lattice: LFE5U-45, LFD2NX-40 (ECP5 / Certus-NX)
Microchip: M2S060, MPF100 (SmartFusion2 / PolarFire)
Isolated DC-DC and local power converters Controllers and modules that generate isolated bias rails from station DC sources, meet creepage and clearance requirements and offer good EMC performance in valve halls and control rooms. TI, Analog Devices, Infineon, STMicroelectronics TI: SN6505, UCC2895, LM5163
ADI: LT3825, LTC3892, LTM8048 μModule
Infineon: ICE2QS02G, XDPL families
ST: L7987, VIPer series devices
Supervisors, reset & watchdog, non-volatile logging Multi-rail voltage supervisors, window watchdogs and reset generators for auxiliary controllers and clock trees, plus FRAM, EEPROM or eMMC for event and trend logging across power cycles. TI, Analog Devices, Microchip, Renesas (Maxim) TI: TPS386000, TPS37 series
ADI: ADM706, ADM1232
Microchip: MCP1316, MCP100, 24LCxx EEPROM, FM24Vxx FRAM
Maxim (Renesas): MAX16054, MAX6414

RFQ preparation checklist for HVDC auxiliary control boards

When approaching distributors or original manufacturers for HVDC auxiliary control designs, detailed context helps them recommend suitable IC combinations much faster than a bare part-number request. Including the following information in RFQs and BOM submissions makes it easier to converge on the right isolated measurement, optical link, clocking and control devices.

  • Electrical and insulation environment: valve-side voltage range, main DC bus level, expected current ranges, insulation class, surge and lightning requirements (for example, target IEC 61000-4-5 levels).
  • Timing and synchronisation needs: whether alignment with substation PTP or PMU time is required, allowable jitter and phase error for sampling clocks, and desired holdover time in case station time sources are lost.
  • Optical link parameters: fibre type (multimode or single-mode), typical and maximum cable lengths, required data rates and whether the link carries proprietary frames or standard Ethernet-based traffic.
  • Environmental conditions: operating temperature range, humidity and condensation risks, presence of pollution or corrosive atmospheres, and whether the design is located in the valve hall or control room.
  • Reliability and maintenance strategy: desired lifetime, allowance for online replacement or redundant switchover, expectations for diagnostic coverage and whether a central maintenance platform or CMMS is used.
  • System architecture constraints: preferred MCU or FPGA ecosystem, existing tool chains in the organisation, footprint constraints and acceptable power budgets for the auxiliary control board.

Combining this RFQ information with the IC roles and vendor mapping in this section allows suppliers to propose focused shortlists rather than generic catalogues, and helps auxiliary control designs converge quickly on robust, maintainable device selections.

Design checklist & engineering inputs

Design checklist for HVDC auxiliary control

This checklist turns the architectural and reliability considerations on this page into concrete design questions. Working through each item helps define a consistent set of requirements for HVDC valve auxiliary control boards before schematic capture, device selection and RFQ work begin.

  • Confirm HVDC pole voltage and configuration (for example ±320 kV, ±500 kV or ±800 kV, single or bipolar), and decide whether higher future voltage levels need to be supported by the same auxiliary control platform.
  • Define the converter topology and number of valves and submodules that one auxiliary control board is expected to supervise, as this drives channel counts, link density and processing headroom.
  • Specify the typical and worst-case distance between valve halls and control rooms for each link, so that optical budget, connector style and potential need for repeaters or intermediate nodes can be evaluated.
  • List all quantities to be measured by auxiliary control (valve current, valve voltage, submodule capacitor voltage, cooling loop temperatures and flow, insulation resistance and so on) together with their normal operating ranges and absolute limits.
  • Set target sampling rates for each measurement class, such as 50–100 kS/s per channel for valve currents and voltages, and 1–10 samples per second for temperatures and slow process variables.
  • Define accuracy and drift targets for key measurements (for example ≤ 1 %FS over temperature, annual drift ≤ 0.2 %FS) and clarify whether the data will be used only for trends or also for supporting protection decisions.
  • Confirm isolation ratings, working voltages and minimum CMTI requirements for the measurement chain so that isolated sigma-delta modulators, isolation amplifiers and digital isolators can be filtered accordingly.
  • Decide the required data rate per optical link and the framing strategy: raw sampled streams, compact status frames or standards-based transports such as Ethernet or TSN for certain segments.
  • Choose fibre type (multimode or single-mode), connector standard and industrial form factor (SFP, LC patch panels and so on) suitable for installation practices in valve halls and control rooms.
  • Define the redundancy strategy for optical links: single link with monitored health, dual links with automatic failover, or separate upstream and downstream paths with independent diagnostics.
  • Select a local clocking scheme for auxiliary control (single OCXO, dual OCXO with monitored switch or OCXO plus PTP-disciplined PLL) and state the expected holdover time when station time sources are lost.
  • Specify timing alignment requirements towards station PTP or PMU time, including acceptable timestamp error (for example ±1 ms or tighter) and jitter targets for sampling clocks and SerDes references.
  • Set target availability or MTBF figures for the auxiliary control function and clarify whether auxiliary outages are allowed during planned maintenance windows or must be masked by redundancy.
  • Decide the redundancy level for controllers, measurement chains and power domains, for example dual auxiliary controllers per pole, dual optical links and dual-channel health monitoring for critical currents.
  • Define a clear policy for fail-safe versus fail-operational behaviour: which functions must declare data as unknown when quality is low, and which functions should continue logging and trending even when main converters are offline.
  • Describe self-diagnosis expectations, including minimum fault coverage for internal loops, memory and clock supervision, and how diagnostic results should be exposed to SCADA and maintenance tools.
  • Set the required log retention window for detailed events and trends (for example at least 30 days) and define the maximum acceptable logging resolution to keep storage and bandwidth under control.
  • Specify which systems will consume auxiliary data (traditional SCADA, asset health platforms, CMMS) and which protocols are preferred for exporting health metrics, events and configuration snapshots.
  • Confirm expectations for firmware upgrade, remote diagnostics and service access, including whether secure remote connections or off-line log export are required for fault investigation.
  • Define board-level constraints such as form factor, mounting style and power budget (for example total auxiliary control board power ≤ 20 W with derating at high ambient temperature).

Engineering inputs form for vendors and internal teams

The fields below capture the most important engineering inputs that device vendors and module suppliers need to recommend suitable isolated measurement, optical link, clocking, controller and power ICs for HVDC auxiliary control. Filling them in with realistic ranges and constraints greatly reduces the number of design iterations.

Item Example / guidance
HVDC pole voltage ±500 kV in service, design margin for ±800 kV future uprate
Converter topology and valves per pole Modular multilevel converter, 6–8 valves per pole, submodules per valve specified elsewhere
Distance between valve hall and control room 100–300 m typical fibre run, worst-case routed length ≤ 500 m per link
Valves or submodules monitored per board 16 submodules per auxiliary board, 2 boards per valve for redundancy and channel count
Required sampling rate for valve currents 50–100 kS/s per current channel, 10–50 kS/s for valve voltages, 1–10 S/s for temperatures and flows
Measurement accuracy and drift targets ≤ 1 % of full scale over full temperature range, long-term drift ≤ 0.2 %FS per year on critical channels
Optical link data rate and framing 50–200 Mbps per fibre, framed data stream with time tags, optional Ethernet-based transport for diagnostics
Fibre type and connector Multimode OM3 fibre, LC connectors, industrial SFP modules in the control room
Local clocking scheme Dual OCXO with monitored clock switch, optional PTP-disciplined PLL for alignment to station time
Time alignment and holdover requirement Time-stamp alignment to station PTP within ±1 ms, holdover capability ≥ 2 hours within defined accuracy band
Target MTBF / availability Overall system availability ≥ 99.99 %, auxiliary control designed so that single-card failures do not cause uncontrolled outages
Redundancy strategy for controllers and links Dual auxiliary controllers per pole, dual optical links per critical path, dual-channel measurements for key currents and voltages
Allowed latency for health and event reporting Health KPIs refreshed every 1–5 seconds, critical events delivered to SCADA or gateway within 100–500 ms
Log retention window and granularity At least 30 days of time-stamped events and trends stored locally at 1–60 second resolution depending on signal type
Operating temperature and installation environment −40 to +70 °C, valve hall installation, high humidity and pollution degree 2–3, with appropriate conformal coating and creepage margins
Power budget for auxiliary control board Total power consumption ≤ 20 W per board, with derating rules at high ambient temperature and realistic cooling assumptions
Preferred MCU / FPGA ecosystem and standards Existing tool chain based on STM32 and AMD (Xilinx) Artix-7 devices, design to comply with relevant utility and IEC standards for HVDC converters
Design checklist flow for HVDC auxiliary control Simple flow diagram that shows four steps: define environment, define measurement needs, define link and clock requirements, and map requirements to IC and module vendors. HVDC auxiliary control design checklist flow Define environment voltages, distances, temperature and EMC Define measurement quantities, rates and accuracy targets Define link & clock requirements: data rates, jitter, Map requirements to IC and module vendors A structured flow from environment and measurement assumptions to link, clock and vendor choices

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FAQs about HVDC auxiliary control

This FAQ section collects the most common boundary and design questions around HVDC auxiliary control: when to introduce a dedicated auxiliary layer, how it interacts with protection relays and SCADA, how optical links and clocks should be chosen, and which inputs vendors need before recommending concrete IC and module options.

When do I actually need a dedicated HVDC auxiliary control system instead of folding everything into the main control or protection platform?

Dedicated auxiliary control becomes necessary when valve health monitoring, logging and maintenance grow beyond what the main controller and protection relays can reliably handle. If the scheme needs many measurement points, long trend storage, complex diagnostics or independent reliability modes, a separate auxiliary layer keeps critical functions observable without overloading the core control platform.

Who has the final say in critical decisions: the auxiliary controller or the protection relays, and how should that boundary be defined?

Protection relays and main control retain authority over trips and blocking, while the auxiliary controller supplies high-quality status, health indicators and recommended actions. Define clear interfaces: auxiliary outputs data quality and suggested states, protection logic consumes these as inputs, but final tripping decisions and interlocks stay in the dedicated protection and converter control layer.

If the substation already has PMUs and a time-sync system, why does the auxiliary controller still need its own redundant local clocks?

Substation PMUs and time-sync systems provide global time, but local redundant clocks keep auxiliary sampling, optical links and event logs stable whenever the station reference is disturbed or unavailable. Local oscillators and PLLs limit jitter, maintain deterministic timing for converters and links, and preserve meaningful timestamps through network outages or sync transients.

Where is the practical boundary between optical fibre and copper links for HVDC auxiliary control in terms of distance, insulation and EMC?

In HVDC environments, optical fibre is preferred whenever long distances, high insulation levels, large ground potential differences or severe EMC conditions are expected. Copper may be acceptable over short runs in controlled environments, but for typical valve hall to control room routes, fibre links minimize common-mode stress, noise coupling and lightning-induced disturbances.

Can the HVDC auxiliary controller replace some parts of the traditional SCADA system, or should it only act as a data source and health monitor?

An auxiliary controller is best treated as a specialised data and health layer that sits between field equipment and SCADA. It aggregates measurements, performs local checks, manages logs and exposes concise health views. High-level operator commands, interlocks and cross-station coordination remain in SCADA and gateway systems rather than on the auxiliary board.

How should fail-safe and fail-operational behaviour be defined for the auxiliary controller in an HVDC scheme?

Fail-safe behaviour means that when data quality or internal health is doubtful, the auxiliary controller clearly marks information as unknown or degraded so protection is never misled. Fail-operational behaviour focuses on staying available during converter outages, continuing to monitor, log and diagnose while signalling reduced function, instead of silently dropping offline.

How long should event and trend logs be retained in the auxiliary controller to be practically useful for fault analysis and maintenance planning?

Log retention should be long enough to cover at least one full maintenance cycle and the investigation window for rare faults. Many HVDC projects target about thirty days of detailed local logs, with optional longer-term, lower resolution storage in central systems to support seasonal analysis, asset health trending and warranty discussions.

How can lifetime and ageing be estimated for optical links, isolated measurement chains and clock modules in an HVDC auxiliary control design?

Lifetime estimates combine device datasheet information, environmental stress and derating strategy. For optical links, consider optical power margin, connector cleanliness, temperature and vibration. For isolated measurement chains, review insulation ratings, CMTI margin and drift over time. For clock modules, evaluate ageing, frequency stability and holdover performance under expected temperature and supply conditions.

When does it make sense to use an FPGA or SoC FPGA in the auxiliary controller instead of a pure MCU solution?

An FPGA or SoC FPGA becomes attractive when many high-speed channels must be time stamped, voted, filtered or bridged across different protocols in parallel. If auxiliary control requires complex redundancy logic, deterministic latency and future protocol upgrades, programmable logic offers more headroom, while simpler, lower bandwidth schemes usually remain well served by MCUs.

How should the auxiliary controller be scoped relative to the HV isolation and protection relay pages so that responsibilities do not overlap?

HV isolation content focuses on generic insulation components, creepage, surge performance and isolation technologies. Protection relay material covers fault types, settings and trip algorithms. The auxiliary controller page concentrates on valve health, long-term trends, event logs, local redundancy and supporting links, reusing isolation devices and protection signals instead of duplicating their design handbooks.

Is it realistic to retrofit an HVDC auxiliary control layer to an existing scheme, or should it always be planned from the first design phase?

Retrofitting an auxiliary layer is feasible when existing schemes already expose measurement points, spare communication paths and cabinet space. If wiring, interfaces and time-sync were never planned, integration effort and downtime rise sharply. For new projects, auxiliary control should be planned from the first design phase so sensing, links and timing are provisioned cleanly.

What information should be shared with IC and module vendors so that auxiliary control requirements are understood correctly and not reduced to a vague part-number request?

Sharing only a desired part number rarely leads to good outcomes. A more effective RFQ bundles pole voltage, distances, sampling rates, accuracy and drift targets, redundancy strategy, log retention, environmental limits and preferred MCU or FPGA ecosystems. With these inputs, vendors can propose coherent auxiliary control solutions instead of generic catalogue suggestions.