VWWall said:
A previous poster got this mixed up with "skin effect", which only
occurs at much higher frequencies. Many HV lines are made hollow to
increase the diameter without increasing the weight.
Skin effect occurs at all frequencies - but at 60 Hz the skin depth
(where the current density drops to 1/e of the value at the surface) is
about 8 mm, so only large conductors are much affected. Bus tubes for
arc furnaces, which have to carry 50,000 amperes, are hollow because of
the skin effect - a solid 8 inch (200 mm) conductor wouldn't effectively
carry much more 60 Hz current than a hollow conductor with a wall
thickness of 16 mm.
The skin effect is also important even in distribution-size conductors
for accurate calculation of the impedance of a circuit - such as for
estimating fault levels, etc.
I wonder when the economics will mandate DC lines. Maybe even buried
super-conductive! It's only a matter of time.
DC wins when the cost of the terminal equipment is offset by the lower
cost of the conductors and transmission right-of-way - this can make a
very short DC link economically preferable in situations such as urban
construction, or for buried cables or underwater cables. Drawbacks to
DC are the relative difficulty and expense of controlling multi-terminal
networks and lack of a good HVDC circuit breaker.
Superconducting transmission cables are still laboratory experiments,
from what I've read - maybe someday, but I don't think superconducting
cables will be a big factor in energy transmission for many years.
Bill