Power Transformers

Image Part Number Description / PDF Quantity Rfq
187F20

187F20

Hammond Manufacturing

PWR XFMR LAMINATED 100VA CHAS MT

3

166G14

166G14

Hammond Manufacturing

PWR XFMR LAMINATED 7VA CHAS MT

24

187C10

187C10

Hammond Manufacturing

PWR XFMR LAMINATED 12VA CHAS MT

34

273AZ

273AZ

Hammond Manufacturing

PWR XFMR LAMINATED 49VA CHAS MT

3

182S24

182S24

Hammond Manufacturing

PWR XFMR TORO 500VA CHAS MT

1

1182N18

1182N18

Hammond Manufacturing

PWR XFMR TORO 160VA CHAS MT

8

164F20

164F20

Hammond Manufacturing

PWR XFMR LAMINATED 6VA TH

37

160F34

160F34

Hammond Manufacturing

PWR XFMR LAMINATED 4.4VA TH

41

160F56

160F56

Hammond Manufacturing

PWR XFMR LAMINATED 4.4VA TH

5

BD2E

BD2E

Hammond Manufacturing

PWR XFMR LAMINATED 20VA CHAS MT

71

182T12

182T12

Hammond Manufacturing

PWR XFMR TORO 300VA CHAS MT

0

162H12

162H12

Hammond Manufacturing

PWR XFMR LAMINATED 20VA TH

38

166G28

166G28

Hammond Manufacturing

PWR XFMR LAMINATED 14VA CHAS MT

20

266PA12

266PA12

Hammond Manufacturing

PWR XFMR LAMINATED 72VA CHAS MT

7

1182G117

1182G117

Hammond Manufacturing

PWR XFMR TORO 50VA CHAS MT

1

183K24

183K24

Hammond Manufacturing

PWR XFMR LAMINATED 56VA TH

104

1182R110

1182R110

Hammond Manufacturing

PWR XFMR TORO 750VA CHAS MT

1

1182T30

1182T30

Hammond Manufacturing

PWR XFMR TORO 750VA CHAS MT

2

161F120

161F120

Hammond Manufacturing

PWR XFMR LAMINATED 4.4VA TH

5

162E28

162E28

Hammond Manufacturing

XFRMR LAMINATED 2.4VA THRU HOLE

35

Power Transformers

1. Overview

Power transformers are static electrical devices that transfer energy between circuits through electromagnetic induction. They enable voltage conversion (step-up/step-down) while maintaining galvanic isolation. These components are fundamental in power distribution systems, renewable energy integration, and industrial equipment, ensuring efficient energy transmission and voltage level adaptation.

2. Main Types and Functional Classification

TypeFunctional CharacteristicsApplication Examples
Distribution TransformersMedium voltage conversion (1kV-36kV), compact designUrban power grids, residential areas
Transmission TransformersHigh voltage (66kV-800kV), grid stability focusSubstations, long-distance power lines
Instrument TransformersMeasurement and protection (CT/VT types)Energy metering, relay protection
Specialty TransformersCustom configurations (furnace, traction, marine)Industrial furnaces, railway systems

3. Structure and Components

Typical construction includes:

  • Core: Grain-oriented silicon steel laminations for magnetic flux path
  • Windings: Primary/secondary copper/aluminum coils with insulation layers
  • Insulation: Mineral oil, synthetic esters, or solid materials (e.g., epoxy)
  • Cooling System: Radiator tanks, fans, or forced-oil circulation
  • Tap Changer: On-load/off-load voltage regulation mechanism
  • Protection: Buchholz relay, pressure relief valves, temperature sensors

4. Key Technical Parameters

ParameterTypical RangeSignificance
Rated Voltage230V-800kVDetermines system compatibility
Power Capacity50kVA-1000MVADefines energy throughput
Voltage Ratio1:1 to 1:20Specifies transformation ratio
Efficiency95%-99.5%Impacts operational costs
Short Circuit Impedance4%-20%Affects fault current limitation
Insulation ClassA (105 C) to C (220 C)Determines thermal endurance

5. Application Areas

Major sectors include:

  • Electricity distribution networks (urban/rural)
  • Renewable energy systems (wind/solar grid-tied inverters)
  • Industrial machinery (CNC, smelters, compressors)
  • Railway traction systems (15kV-25kV conversion)
  • Data centers (HVDC conversion systems)

6. Leading Manufacturers and Products

ManufacturerRepresentative ProductKey Features
Siemens EnergyBlue TransformersEnvironmentally friendly synthetic ester insulation
Asea Brown Boveri (ABB)550kV UHV Transformer 500kV DC transmission capability
General Electric (GE)Premier SeriesSmart monitoring with Predictivity analytics
Mitsubishi Electric330MVA Traction TransformerCompact design for Shinkansen trains

7. Selection Guidelines

Key considerations:

  • Voltage levels (primary/secondary requirements)
  • Load profile (continuous vs. intermittent duty)
  • Cooling requirements (ONAN/ONAF/OFAF modes)
  • Environmental conditions (temperature, altitude, seismic zones)
  • Protection features (IP rating, fire resistance)
  • Smart grid compatibility (IoT sensor integration)

Case Study: Wind farm grid connection selected 33/132kV ONAF-cooled transformer with 12% impedance to meet fault ride-through requirements.

8. Industry Trends

Current development directions:

  • Smart transformers with real-time monitoring (IEEE C57.163 compliant)
  • Amorphous metal core adoption (50% core loss reduction)
  • Hydrogen-cooled systems for offshore applications
  • Modular solid-state transformer (SST) prototypes (DOE GRID DATA initiative)
  • Increased demand for 132kV+ mobile transformers in disaster recovery

Market forecasts indicate 6.2% CAGR through 2030, driven by grid modernization and EV charging infrastructure expansion.

RFQ BOM Call Skype Email
Top