Power Quality: Presented by - Kaustubh Nande and Group Guided by - Prof. P.M.M. (YCCE)
Power Quality: Presented by - Kaustubh Nande and Group Guided by - Prof. P.M.M. (YCCE)
DEFINITION
The IEEE defines POWER QUALITY as the ability of a system or an equipment to function satisfactorily in its electromagnetic environment without introducing intolerable electromagnetic disturbances to anything in that environment. PQ mainly deals with 1. Continuity of the supply. 2.Quality of the voltage.
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SCOPE
For economic operation of a power system, the level of power quality should be properly maintained. PQ is a vast concept concerning optimization. The adverse effects due to over voltages, also the losses incurred due to the under voltages have to be seriously dealt. Also, nonlinear loads introduce harmonics in the system which have their own adverse effects including power factor reduction. Hence, power quality provides a good platform to deal with all these problems.
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BLACKOUTS
It is short or long term loss of electric power to an area. CAUSES: Faults at power stations. Damage to electric transmission lines, substations or other parts of the distribution system. Short circuit, or the overloading of electricity mains.
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EFFECTS: Total loss of power to an area. Tripping of substations. Under certain conditions, a network component shutting down can cause current fluctuations in neighboring segments of the network leading to a cascading failure of a larger section of the network. This may range from a building, to a block, to an entire city, to an entire electrical grid.
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BROWNOUTS
A brownout is an intentional or unintentional drop in voltage in an electrical power supply system. CAUSES: Use of excessive loads causes reduction in voltage which in turn causes brownouts.
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EFFECTS:
Unexpected behavior in systems with digital control circuits. The system can experience glitches, data loss and equipment failure.
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Long interruptions
Description: Total interruption of electrical supply for duration greater than 1 to 2 seconds Causes: Equipment failure in the power system network, storms and objects (trees, cars, etc) striking lines or poles, fire, human error, bad coordination or failure of protection devices. Consequences: Stoppage of all equipment.
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Voltage Spikes
In electrical engineering, spikes are fast, short duration electrical transients in voltage.
CAUSES: Lightning strikes Power outages Tripped circuit breakers Short circuits EFFECTS: Voltage spikes may be created by a rapid buildup or decay of a magnetic field, which may induce energy into the associated circuit.
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Voltage Swell
Description: Momentary increase of the voltage, at the power frequency, outside the normal tolerances, with duration of more than one cycle and typically less than a few seconds. Causes: Start/stop of heavy loads, badly dimensioned power sources, badly regulated transformers (mainly during off-peak hours). Consequences: Data loss, flickering of lighting and screens, stoppage or damage of sensitive equipment, if the voltage values are too high.
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Harmonic distortion
Description: Voltage or current waveforms assume non-sinusoidal shape. The waveform corresponds to the sum of different sine-waves with different magnitude and phase, having frequencies that are multiples of power-system frequency. Causes: Classic sources: electric machines working above the knee of the magnetization curve (magnetic saturation), arc furnaces, welding machines, rectifiers, and DC brush motors. Modern sources: all non-linear loads, such as power electronics equipment including ASDs, switched mode power supplies, data processing equipment, high efficiency lighting. Consequences: Increased probability in occurrence of resonance, neutral overload in 3-phase systems, overheating of all cables and equipment, loss of efficiency in electric machines, electromagnetic interference with communication systems, errors in measures when using average reading meters, nuisance tripping of thermal protections. 2
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VOLTAGE SURGES
It is a voltage rise that endangers the insulation of electric equipment. TYPES : 1. Lightning surges. 2. System-generated surges.
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CAUSES:
1. Shutdown of heavily loaded circuits. 2. Necessary commutation of a high-powered network (e.g. Pf correction). 3. Switching events such as the connection or disconnection of a current and shortcircuiting to ground.
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EFFECTS: Computers and other sensitive electronic equipment can seriously be damaged by such an over-voltage surge. Temporal fluctuations produce parity errors and interrupts protection systems.
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FLICKERING
It is a visible change in brightness of a lamp due to rapid fluctuations in the voltage of the power supply.
CAUSE: It increase as the size of the changing load becomes larger with respect to the prospective short circuit current available at the point of common connection.
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Voltage Fluctuation
Description: Oscillation of voltage value, amplitude modulated by a signal with frequency of 0 to 30 Hz. Causes: Arc furnaces, frequent start/stop of electric motors (for instance elevators), oscillating loads. Consequences: Most consequences are common to undervoltages. The most perceptible consequence is the flickering of lighting and screens, giving the impression of unsteadiness of visual perception.
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Noise
Description: Superimposing of high frequency signals on the waveform of the power-system frequency. Causes: Electromagnetic interferences provoked by Hertzian waves such as microwaves, television diffusion, and radiation due to welding machines, arc furnaces, and electronic equipment. Improper grounding may also be a cause. Consequences: Disturbances on sensitive electronic equipment, usually not destructive. May cause data loss and data processing errors.
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Voltage Unbalance
Description: A voltage variation in a three-phase system in which the three voltage magnitudes or the phase angle differences between them are not equal. Causes: Large single-phase loads (induction furnaces, traction loads), incorrect distribution of all single-phase loads by the three phases of the system (this may be also due to a fault). Consequences: Unbalanced systems imply the existence of a negative sequence that is harmful to all three phase loads. The most affected loads are three-phase induction machines.
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MITIGATION TECHNIQUES
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The Dynamic Voltage Restorer (DVR), also referred to as the Series Voltage Booster (SVB) or the Static Series Compensator (SSC), is a device that utilizes solid state (or static) power electronic components, and is connected in series to the utility primary distribution circuit. The DVR provides three phase controllable voltage, whose vector (magnitude and angle) adds to the source voltage to restore the load voltage to presag conditions.
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CONTROL TECHNIQUES
Linear Controllers (Open loop or Closed loop control system) Non Linear Controllers (Sinusoidal Pulse width modulation techniques)
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Harmonic Filters
Power factor depends on:1.Displacement between current and voltage phasors 2.Total Harmonic distortion pf = displacement pf * distortion pf Current-voltage displacement can be minimized by using capacitor banks(to compensate the reactive power) and synchronous condensers, etc.
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Harmonic distortion can be minimized by using harmonic filters(an arrangement of linear elements). These elements are so arranged so as to eliminate the particular harmonics(of integral Fourier order). Once the harmonics are maximum filtered off, the distortion power factor(inversely proportional to the total harmonic distortion) turns unity and thus the power factor improves.
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Isolation Transformers
Isolation transformers are used to isolate sensitive loads transients and noise deriving from the mains. In some cases (Delta-Wye connection) isolation transformers keep harmonic currents generated by loads from getting upstream the transformer. The particularity of isolation transformers is a grounded shield made of nonmagnetic foil located between the primary and the secondary. Any noise or transient that come from the source in transmitted through the capacitance between the primary and the shield and on to the ground and does not reach the load.
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Noise Filters
Noise filters are used to avoid unwanted frequency current or voltage signals (noise) from reaching sensitive equipment. This can be accomplished by using a combination of capacitors and inductances that creates a low impedance path to the fundamental frequency and high impedance to higher frequencies, that is, a lowpass filter. They should be used when noise with frequency in the kHz range is considerable.
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1. Increasing power transfer in long lines 2. Stability improvement (both steady state and transient) with fast acting voltage regulation 3. Damping of low frequency oscillations (corresponding to electromechanical modes.) 4. Control of dynamic over voltages
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Characteristics of SVC
In short, Shunt active filters eliminate the harmonics, Whereas, Series active filters allow the passage of only the fundamental wave.
Conclusion
POWER QUALITY maintenance is an important aspect in the economic operation of a system. Various PQ problems may lead to another undesirable problems. Proper mitigation devices can be used to maintain the level of power quality as desired.