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Worked Example: Resilient LV Network Design for a Coastal Community — Hurricane Maria, Puerto Rico

Complete LV distribution network design for a 200-dwelling coastal community per IEC 60364-5-52. Includes ADMD calculation, transformer sizing for redundancy, ring-main topology, voltage drop across the network, fault level verification, and protection coordination. Based on the lessons of Hurricane Maria (2017), the longest blackout in US history.

IEC 6036422 min readUpdated February 24, 2026
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The Incident: When an Entire Grid Disappears

On 20 September 2017, Hurricane Maria made landfall on Puerto Rico as a Category 4 storm with sustained winds of 250 km/h. Within 24 hours, the island’s entire electrical grid was destroyed — 100% of 3.4 million customers lost power. It became the longest blackout in US history, with some areas waiting 11 months for restoration. The official death toll was revised to 2,975, many caused by the prolonged loss of power to medical equipment, refrigeration, and water pumping systems.

While media attention focused on the high-voltage transmission towers felled across mountain ridges, the low-voltage distribution network suffered equally catastrophic — and more insidious — damage. Puerto Rico’s LV network (120/240 V split-phase, 60 Hz) was built almost entirely on single radial feeders: one distribution transformer serving an entire neighbourhood via a single cable route. There were no ring main units, no automatic sectionalising switches, and no alternative supply paths. When a distribution transformer failed from wind damage, flooding, or flying debris, every dwelling on that feeder lost power with no possibility of back-feed from an adjacent transformer.

Restoration was agonisingly slow because each failed section required an individual transformer replacement and complete LV cable re-stringing — there was no way to temporarily reroute supply through the LV network. The lesson is fundamental: LV network topology determines community resilience. A ring-main LV design with sectionalising capability can restore power to an entire neighbourhood by switching to an alternative supply path within minutes, even while the damaged section is being repaired. The upfront cost premium for ring-main LV distribution is typically 15–25% over radial — a fraction of the economic and human cost of an extended blackout.

Scenario: 200-Dwelling Coastal Community LV Network

Design a resilient LV distribution network for a new 200-dwelling coastal community, incorporating the lessons of Hurricane Maria. Calculate transformer sizing, LV feeder cable sizing, voltage drop, fault level, and protection coordination for a ring-main topology.

ParameterValue
Community size200 dwellings (single-storey, tropical climate)
Supply voltage415 V three-phase, 50 Hz (11 kV primary)
ADMD per dwelling5 kVA (air conditioning climate, per IEC 60364)
Network topologyRing main with normally-open point
Cable installationDirect buried, XLPE insulated, copper conductors
Maximum cable run400 m (transformer to furthest consumer)
Soil thermal resistivity1.5 K·m/W (tropical sandy soil)
Ambient soil temperature30°C
Primary standardIEC 60364-5-52:2009

Step 1: Calculate Total Community Maximum Demand (ADMD Method)

The After Diversity Maximum Demand (ADMD) method accounts for the statistical diversity of residential loads. Not all 200 dwellings will demand their peak load simultaneously. Per IEC 60364-5-52, Annex E and AS/NZS 3000:2018, Appendix C:

MDtotal = N × ADMD = 200 × 5 kVA — (Eq. 1)

MDtotal = 1,000 kVA

The ADMD of 5 kVA per dwelling is appropriate for a tropical climate where air conditioning is the dominant load. In temperate climates without air conditioning, ADMD is typically 3–4 kVA. In cold climates with electric heating, ADMD can reach 8–12 kVA.

Note: ADMD already includes diversity. Unlike commercial maximum demand calculations where you apply demand factors then a building diversity factor, the ADMD figure is the diversified demand per dwelling. Applying additional diversity to an ADMD-based calculation would undersize the network.

Step 2: Size Distribution Transformers for Redundancy

For a resilient design, split the community across two transformers so that either can carry the full load if the other fails (N−1 redundancy):

Stransformer ≥ MDtotal = 1,000 kVA — (Eq. 2)

Standard oil-type transformer ratings (ONAN cooling): 315, 500, 630, 800, 1000, 1250, 1500, 2000 kVA.

Option A — Radial (Puerto Rico legacy design): 1 × 1,000 kVA transformer. Single point of failure. If it fails, all 200 dwellings lose power.

Option B — Resilient (ring-main design): 2 × 630 kVA transformers, each normally supplying 100 dwellings (500 kVA, 79% loading). If either fails, the ring-main network allows the surviving transformer to pick up the full 1,000 kVA load at 159% — which exceeds its continuous rating.

Per IEC 60076-7 (Loading guide for oil-immersed transformers), a transformer can sustain 150% loading for approximately 30 minutes and 130% for 2 hours during emergency conditions. However, sustained operation at 159% risks winding damage.

Selected: 2 × 800 kVA transformers (each normally loaded at 500/800 = 62.5%). Under N−1 conditions, the surviving transformer carries 1,000 kVA at 125% — acceptable for the 2–4 hours needed to deploy a mobile replacement unit.

Normal loading = 500 / 800 = 62.5% per transformer — (Eq. 3)

Emergency loading = 1,000 / 800 = 125% (N−1 contingency)

Step 3: Design the Ring-Main LV Network Topology

The ring-main topology connects both transformers via a continuous LV cable loop with a normally-open point (NOP) at the midpoint. Under normal conditions, each transformer feeds its half of the ring (100 dwellings). During a contingency, the NOP closes and the surviving transformer feeds the entire ring.

Network ElementNormal ModeN−1 Contingency
Transformer A (800 kVA)Supplies 100 dwellings (500 kVA)Supplies all 200 dwellings (1,000 kVA)
Transformer B (800 kVA)Supplies 100 dwellings (500 kVA)Out of service
NOP switchOpenClosed
Ring cableCarries 50% load in each halfCarries 100% load in one direction

Each half-ring serves 100 dwellings over a maximum distance of 400 m. Distribution pillars are placed at approximately 50 m intervals, each serving 12–13 dwellings via LV service cables.

Key resilience feature: The NOP can be fitted with an automatic changeover switch (ATS). When Transformer B fails, the ATS detects loss of voltage on its side of the ring and closes the NOP within 0.5–3 seconds, restoring supply to all consumers from Transformer A. This is the critical capability that Puerto Rico’s radial network lacked.

Step 4: Size LV Main Feeder Cable (Ring Backbone)

The ring backbone cable must be sized for the N−1 contingency, where it carries the full community load from a single transformer:

Icontingency = Stotal / (√3 × V) = 1,000,000 / (√3 × 415) — (Eq. 4)

Icontingency = 1,391 A

Under normal operation (each half-ring carrying 500 kVA):

Inormal = 500,000 / (√3 × 415) = 696 A

From IEC 60364-5-52, Table B.52.2 for direct-buried XLPE copper cables (Installation Method D1):

Apply derating for soil conditions per IEC 60364-5-52, Table B.52.15:

ksoil-temp = 0.95 (30°C soil vs. 20°C reference) — (Eq. 5)

ksoil-resistivity = 0.88 (1.5 K·m/W vs. 1.0 K·m/W reference)

ktotal = 0.95 × 0.88 = 0.836

Iz,required = Icontingency / ktotal = 1,391 / 0.836 = 1,664 A

A single cable cannot carry 1,664 A. Use parallel cables per phase:

Selected: 2 × 300 mm² XLPE copper per phase (4-core cables, 2 in parallel)

From Table B.52.2, Method D1, 300 mm² XLPE copper: Itab = 960 A per cable.

Grouped derating for 2 parallel cables per trench per Table B.52.17: kgroup = 0.85

Iz,derated = 2 × 960 × 0.836 × 0.85 = 1,363 A

This is slightly below the 1,391 A contingency current. However, the contingency condition is temporary (hours, not continuous), and IEC 60364 permits short-duration overload per Clause 433.1. For a fully rated continuous design, upsize to 2 × 400 mm² per phase (Itab = 1,070 A, derated = 1,519 A). This provides a 9% margin.

Selected backbone cable: 2 × 400 mm² XLPE Cu per phase, direct buried

Step 5: Calculate Voltage Drop Across the Network

Voltage drop must be checked for the worst case: the furthest consumer from the surviving transformer under N−1 contingency. The cable route is 400 m with load distributed uniformly along the route.

For uniformly distributed load, the voltage drop is equivalent to a concentrated load at half the route length per IEC 60364-5-52, Clause 525:

ΔV = √3 × Itotal × (R cosφ + X sinφ) × Leff — (Eq. 6)

Where Leff = L/2 = 200 m for uniformly distributed load.

For 2 × 400 mm² XLPE Cu in parallel, per phase impedance data from IEC 60228:

R = ρ × L / (n × A) = 0.0183 × 200 / (2 × 400) = 0.00458 Ω/phase

X = 0.08 × 10−3 × 200 = 0.016 Ω/phase (typical for direct-buried)

At power factor 0.9 (typical residential mix of resistive and inductive loads):

ΔV = √3 × 1,391 × (0.00458 × 0.9 + 0.016 × 0.436) — (Eq. 7)

ΔV = 1.732 × 1,391 × (0.00412 + 0.00698)

ΔV = 2,409 × 0.01110 = 26.7 V

ΔV% = 26.7 / 415 × 100 = 6.4%

Exceeds limit! The IEC 60364, Clause 525.1 recommended limit is 5% from the origin to the furthest point. At 6.4%, the N−1 contingency case fails the voltage drop check. However, this is the extreme contingency (full load, maximum distance, emergency operation). Options: (1) accept 6.4% for temporary emergency conditions (many utilities allow up to 8% during contingency); (2) install a third transformer to reduce the maximum cable run; (3) increase the cable size to 2 × 500 mm².

Under normal operation (696 A per half-ring, 200 m maximum):

ΔVnormal = √3 × 696 × 0.01110 × (200/400) = 6.7 V = 1.6%

Normal operation is well within the 5% limit.

Step 6: Calculate Prospective Fault Current at End of LV Network

The fault level at the furthest point determines whether protective devices can operate correctly. Calculate the three-phase fault current at the end of the 400 m ring backbone per IEC 60909-0, Clause 4.2:

Transformer impedance (800 kVA, uk = 5%):

ZT = uk% × V² / (100 × Sn) = 0.05 × 415² / 800,000 — (Eq. 8)

ZT = 0.01077 Ω

Cable impedance (2 × 400 mm², 400 m):

Zcable = √(R² + X²) = √(0.00916² + 0.032²) = 0.0333 Ω

(Using full 400 m length for fault at the extreme end, not the distributed load effective length.)

Total impedance and fault current:

Ztotal = ZT + Zcable = 0.01077 + 0.0333 = 0.0441 Ω

Ik″ = c × V / (√3 × Ztotal) = 1.0 × 415 / (√3 × 0.0441) — (Eq. 9)

Ik″ = 5,434 A (5.4 kA)

At the transformer LV bus (negligible cable impedance):

Ik,bus″ = 415 / (√3 × 0.01077) = 22.3 kA

Note: The fault current drops from 22.3 kA at the transformer to 5.4 kA at 400 m — a reduction of 76%. This is typical of long LV cable runs and has critical implications for protection: every protective device along the ring must be verified to trip within the required time at the reduced fault level available at its location.

Step 7: Design Protection Coordination Scheme

The protection coordination chain from 11 kV source to consumer must ensure discrimination (selectivity) at all fault levels per IEC 60364-5-53, Clause 536:

LevelDeviceRatingFunction
111 kV fuse (transformer HV)80 A BS 88Transformer overcurrent + fault backup
2LV main MCCB (each transformer)1,250 A frame, electronic tripMain LV bus protection
3Ring feeder MCCB800 A frame, electronic tripRing backbone sectionalising
4Distribution pillar MCCB200 A, thermal-magneticStreet-level distribution
5Consumer MCB63 A Type B (main switch)Individual dwelling protection

Grading margins:

Per IEC 60947-2, Annex A, the minimum grading margin between electronic trip MCCBs is 0.15 s. Between an MCCB and a downstream MCB, 0.1 s is sufficient because MCBs operate faster.

Settings for ring feeder MCCB (800 A):

Long-time pickup: 1.0 × In = 800 A

Short-time pickup: 4 × In = 3,200 A, delay 0.3 s

Instantaneous: 15 × In = 12,000 A

Settings for main MCCB (1,250 A):

Long-time pickup: 1.0 × In = 1,250 A

Short-time pickup: 4 × In = 5,000 A, delay 0.5 s

Instantaneous: 18 × In = 22,500 A

Step 8: Verify Protection Adequacy at Furthest Point

The critical check: at the furthest point (400 m), the available fault current is only 5.4 kA. The consumer MCB (63 A Type B) must trip within the required disconnection time.

Per IEC 60364-4-41, Table 41.1: for a 415 V TN-S system, the maximum disconnection time for a 63 A circuit is 0.4 s.

A Type B MCB trips magnetically at 3–5 × In. The magnetic trip threshold is:

Imag = 5 × 63 = 315 A

At 5,434 A available fault current, the ratio Ifault/Imag = 5,434/315 = 17.3 — well into the instantaneous region. The MCB will trip in < 0.01 s. ✓

Now check the earth fault loop impedance at 400 m per IEC 60364-4-41, Clause 411.4.4:

Zs ≤ U0 / Ia — (Eq. 10)

Where U0 = 240 V (phase to neutral) and Ia = 315 A (MCB instantaneous trip current).

Zs,max = 240 / 315 = 0.762 Ω

Actual earth fault loop impedance (transformer + 400 m cable phase + 400 m cable earth conductor):

Zs,actual = ZT + 2 × Rcable,400m = 0.01077 + 2 × 0.00916 = 0.0291 Ω

0.0291 Ω is far below the 0.762 Ω maximum. Earth fault protection is adequate.

Note: Even with the long 400 m cable run, the earth fault loop impedance is well within limits because of the large 400 mm² conductors. For smaller distribution cables (e.g., 35 mm² service cables from pillar to dwelling), this check becomes more critical and may govern the maximum service cable length.

Result Summary

ParameterValueStatus
Total community demand (ADMD)1,000 kVA (200 × 5 kVA)
Transformers2 × 800 kVA (11 kV / 415 V)N−1 redundancy
Normal loading per transformer62.5%✓ PASS
Contingency loading (N−1)125% (acceptable per IEC 60076-7)✓ PASS
Ring backbone cable2 × 400 mm² XLPE Cu per phase
Voltage drop (normal, 200 m)1.6%✓ PASS (≤ 5%)
Voltage drop (contingency, 400 m)6.4%▵ MARGINAL (accept for emergency)
Fault current at LV bus22.3 kA
Fault current at 400 m5.4 kA
Consumer MCB tripping at 400 m< 0.01 s at 5.4 kA✓ PASS
Earth fault loop impedance at 400 m0.029 Ω (≤ 0.762 Ω)✓ PASS

Selected design: 2 × 800 kVA transformers with ring-main LV backbone (2 × 400 mm² XLPE Cu per phase), normally-open point with ATS, 16 distribution pillars. The ring-main topology provides automatic supply restoration within seconds of a single transformer failure, compared to the weeks or months required to restore radial feeders after Hurricane Maria.

What Would Have Prevented This?

Hurricane Maria’s destruction of Puerto Rico’s electrical grid was exacerbated by decades of underinvestment and a network topology with zero resilience at the LV distribution level. The engineering lessons:

  • Design LV networks with ring-main topology, not radial feeders — the 15–25% capital premium for ring-main distribution is trivial compared to the economic cost of extended outages; automatic sectionalising switches can restore supply in seconds rather than months
  • Size transformers for N−1 redundancy — two smaller transformers at 60–65% normal loading can each carry the full community load during contingency, avoiding the single point of failure that left Puerto Rican neighbourhoods powerless for months
  • Use underground cables in hurricane-prone areas — direct-buried XLPE cables are immune to wind damage; while more expensive to install and repair than overhead lines, they survive Category 4 hurricanes intact
  • Install automatic transfer switches at the normally-open point — manual switching requires a crew to attend site, which may be impossible during a storm; an ATS with voltage monitoring restores supply automatically within seconds
  • Maintain an inventory of mobile transformers and pre-fabricated LV switchgear — utility emergency response is only as fast as equipment availability; Puerto Rico had almost no spare transformers, turning a weeks-long recovery into an 11-month ordeal

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Frequently Asked Questions

After Diversity Maximum Demand (ADMD) is the diversified peak demand per dwelling, typically expressed in kVA. It already accounts for the statistical diversity between dwellings -- the fact that not all households cook, run air conditioning, and heat water simultaneously. ADMD is multiplied directly by the number of dwellings to give the total network demand. This differs from commercial maximum demand calculations where you first sum connected loads by category, apply demand factors to each category, then apply a building diversity factor. ADMD values range from 3 kVA (temperate, no AC) to 12 kVA (cold climate, electric heating) and are typically established by the local distribution utility based on metered data.
A ring-main LV network provides two supply paths to every point on the network. Under normal conditions, the ring operates with a normally-open point (NOP) that splits it into two radial feeders, each supplied by a different transformer. When one transformer or cable section fails, the NOP closes (manually or via an automatic transfer switch), and the surviving transformer feeds the entire ring. This restores supply to all consumers within seconds or minutes, compared to hours, days, or months for a radial feeder where a single failure isolates all downstream consumers until the damaged equipment is physically replaced.
IEC 60364-5-52 Clause 525.1 recommends a 5% voltage drop limit for normal continuous operation, ensuring appliances receive voltage within their rated tolerance. During contingency (N-1 emergency operation), many utilities and national standards permit relaxed limits of 6-8% because the condition is temporary and infrequent. The engineering judgement is that a brief period of slightly low voltage (causing minor dimming of lights and slight reduction in motor torque) is far preferable to a complete loss of supply. The designer should document this relaxation and verify that critical loads (medical equipment, IT systems) can tolerate the reduced voltage.

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