# Q6. How do dissolved gases indicate problems?
Dissolved Gas Analysis (DGA) is one of the most reliable diagnostic methods for detecting incipient transformer faults. Electrical and thermal stresses break down oil and cellulose insulation into gases such as hydrogen, methane, ethane, ethylene, acetylene, carbon monoxide, and carbon dioxide. Each gas is associated with specific fault types: hydrogen with partial discharges, methane and ethane with low-temperature overheating, ethylene with high-temperature faults, acetylene with arcing, and carbon oxides with paper degradation.
Because these gases dissolve in the oil, sampling and analyzing them provides a non-invasive way to assess internal transformer health. IEEE C57.104 and IEC 60599 outline interpretation methods, including gas ratios and total combustible gas (TCG) thresholds. For example, the Duval Triangle method uses relative concentrations of key gases to classify faults with high accuracy.
Routine DGA testing enables trending, which is more informative than single measurements. A sudden increase in acetylene may indicate a developing arc, while rising carbon monoxide levels suggest accelerating paper ageing. If left unchecked, such conditions can escalate into catastrophic failures.
DGA is so sensitive that it can often detect problems months or years before conventional tests or visible symptoms. For this reason, IEC 60422 recommends annual DGA for in-service transformers, with more frequent intervals for critical units. Combined with other diagnostics, dissolved gas analysis remains a cornerstone of predictive maintenance.
# Q7. What is oil filtration and when is it used?
Oil filtration is a treatment process designed to remove suspended solid contaminants such as fibers, carbon particles, and metallic debris from transformer oil. These particles may originate from manufacturing residues, insulation wear, arcing, or external contamination during maintenance. While relatively simple compared to regeneration, filtration plays an important role in routine oil care.
Contaminants reduce dielectric strength by providing nucleation sites for discharges and accelerating sludge formation. IEC 60422 recommends corrective action when particle counts exceed set limits, particularly in high-voltage transformers where even microscopic debris can trigger partial discharges. Filtration through fine-mesh filters or filter cartridges reduces these risks, restoring oil cleanliness to acceptable standards.
However, filtration has limitations. It does not remove dissolved gases, water, acids, or corrosive sulfur compounds, which are often the main drivers of oil degradation. For this reason, filtration is typically applied as a preventive measure after transformer maintenance or as a short-term corrective action following contamination events.
In practice, filtration is often integrated into broader treatment. For example, FLOWOIL systems combine particle filtration with optional heating and degassing, making them more effective in improving oil quality. While not a substitute for dehydration or regeneration, filtration remains an economical and practical step in maintaining transformer oil cleanliness.
# Q8. What is oil dehydration?
Oil dehydration targets one of the most harmful contaminants in transformer oil: water. Even small amounts of dissolved moisture reduce dielectric breakdown voltage, accelerate cellulose ageing, and increase risk of bubble formation under electrical stress. IEC 60422 specifies that high-voltage transformers should maintain water levels below 20 ppm, while critical transformers may require values below 10 ppm.
Dehydration is typically performed using vacuum treatment. The oil is heated under reduced pressure, allowing water molecules to vaporize and be extracted without damaging the oil. This process also removes dissolved gases such as oxygen and nitrogen, further improving dielectric performance. Advanced units like FILOIL and ECOIL achieve rapid reduction of water content to safe levels, often raising breakdown voltage above 70 kV.
Regular dehydration is especially important in humid climates, for transformers with compromised seals, or during startup after long storage periods. It is also a common step prior to energizing new transformers to ensure oil meets IEC 60156 breakdown strength requirements.
Although dehydration is highly effective, it does not remove acids or sludge already formed in the oil. For aged oil showing chemical degradation, full regeneration may be required. Nonetheless, dehydration remains one of the most widely applied and reliable treatments for restoring insulating oil performance.
# Q9. What is adsorption treatment?
Adsorption treatment involves passing transformer oil through sorbents such as activated clays, bauxite, or Fuller's earth, which selectively capture polar degradation products. These include organic acids, aldehydes, peroxides, and sludge precursors, all of which compromise oil's dielectric and chemical stability. By removing these compounds, adsorption improves interfacial tension, lowers acidity, and restores oil color and clarity.
Adsorption is typically applied when acidity approaches 0,1 mg KOH/g, a threshold where sludge formation becomes likely. IEC 60422 recognizes adsorption as an effective corrective measure for moderately aged oils. It is particularly valuable for utilities seeking to extend oil life without undertaking full regeneration.
However, traditional adsorption methods have limitations. Once sorbents are saturated, they must be disposed of as waste, creating environmental concerns. Advanced systems, such as REOIL C, allow for reactivation of sorbents, minimizing disposal requirements and supporting circular economy principles.
Adsorption is not a permanent solution, as it removes degradation products but does not fundamentally restore the oil to "as new" condition. Nonetheless, it is highly effective as an intermediate treatment, bridging the gap between filtration/dehydration and full regeneration. When integrated into preventive maintenance, adsorption significantly slows the ageing process of both oil and cellulose insulation, helping to sustain transformer reliability.
# Q10. What is full regeneration?
Full regeneration is the most comprehensive treatment available for in-service transformer oil. Unlike filtration or adsorption alone, regeneration addresses the full spectrum of degradation products, restoring oil to near "as new" quality as defined by IEC 60296. The process combines multiple stages, including adsorption to remove acids and polar compounds, dehydration to eliminate water, and vacuum degassing to remove dissolved gases.
Regeneration not only improves dielectric breakdown strength but also restores interfacial tension, reduces acidity to below 0,03 mg KOH/g, and eliminates corrosive sulfur compounds. This is particularly important for ageing oils at risk of sludge deposition and copper sulfide formation.
A key advantage of regeneration is that it can be performed online, allowing transformers to remain energized during the process. REOIL systems are specifically designed for continuous, online regeneration, minimizing downtime and avoiding costly outages. By reactivating sorbents, REOIL also reduces environmental waste, aligning with sustainability targets.
Field data shows that regeneration can extend transformer life by 10–20 years, delaying or even eliminating the need for costly replacements. Compared to oil replacement, regeneration is both cost-effective and environmentally friendly, producing up to 80% less waste. For utilities managing large transformer fleets, regeneration has become the cornerstone of advanced asset management strategies.
# Q11. How does oil treatment compare to replacement?
Oil replacement involves draining aged oil and refilling with new insulating oil. While this restores dielectric strength, it has major drawbacks. First, it is costly: the price of new oil, logistics, and disposal of thousands of liters of waste add up quickly. Second, replacement does not address contaminants embedded in cellulose insulation, leaving the root cause of degradation untouched. Third, environmental regulations make disposal of waste oil increasingly complex and expensive.
In contrast, oil treatment methods — filtration, dehydration, adsorption, and especially regeneration — preserve and restore the existing oil, often to "as new" quality. Regeneration in particular offers a circular economy solution, reducing CO₂ emissions and waste volumes by up to 80%. REOIL systems are widely adopted for this purpose, combining technical performance with environmental benefits.
From a lifecycle cost perspective, regeneration and other treatments are significantly more economical than replacement. They also allow online processing, avoiding outages. For utilities, the decision is clear: replacement should be reserved for oils beyond salvage or in cases of catastrophic contamination, while treatment and regeneration are the preferred strategies for long-term transformer health and compliance with IEC 60422.