Induced atmospheric vibration was the cause of the Spanish power outage


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The Portuguese grid operator — REN — is out with a diagnosis of what happened with the huge power outage today:

  • Due to extreme temperature variations in the interior of Spain, there were anomalous oscillations in very high volatge lines, something called ‘induced atmospheric vibration’
  • These osculations cause synchronization failures between the electrical systems
  • It’s a complex phenomenon and there is a need to rebalance electricity flows internationally, it could take a week to fix

That’s fascinating.

Here is how DeepSeek explains it:

Induced Atmospheric Vibration (IAV) in high-voltage power lines refers to low-frequency oscillations (typically 0.1–10 Hz) caused by corona discharge effects near the conductors. Here’s a brief breakdown:

  1. Cause:

    • When high-voltage lines operate near their corona inception threshold, ionization of surrounding air molecules occurs, creating space charges (ions and electrons).

    • Under
      certain conditions (e.g., high humidity, rough conductor surfaces),
      these charges interact with the electric field, generating periodic electrohydrodynamic (EHD) forces.

  2. Mechanism:

    • The EHD forces induce pressure waves in the air, causing vibrations in the conductor or nearby objects (e.g., insulators).

    • Unlike aeolian vibration (caused by wind) or galloping (large-amplitude motion), IAV is driven purely by electrical-atmospheric coupling.

  3. Effects:

    • Usually low amplitude but can contribute to fatigue over time.

    • May exacerbate other vibration modes or cause audible hum.

  4. Mitigation:

    • Smooth conductor surfaces (e.g., polished or coated wires).

    • Optimized voltage gradients to minimize corona.

IAV
is less common than mechanical vibrations but is studied for its unique
electromechanical interactions. …

The vibrations can lead to fatigue cracks and loosened hardware.

This article was written by Adam Button at www.forexlive.com.

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