Induction Generator
Induction Generator
Contents
1 Principle of operation
o 1.1 Excitation
o 1.2 Active power
o 1.3 Required capacitance
o 1.4 Torque vs. slip
4 Example application
5 See also
6 References
7 External links
Principle of operation
Induction generators and motors produce electrical power when their rotor is turned faster than
the synchronous speed. For a typical four-pole motor (two pairs of poles on stator) operating on a
60 Hz electrical grid, the synchronous speed is 1800 rotations per minute. The same four-pole
motor operating on a 50 Hz grid will have a synchronous speed of 1500 RPM. The motor
normally turns slightly slower than the synchronous speed; the difference between synchronous
and operating speed is called "slip" and is usually expressed as per cent of the synchronous
speed. For example, a motor operating at 1450 RPM that has a synchronous speed of 1500 RPM
is runnign at a slip of +3.3%.
In normal motor operation, stator flux rotation is faster than the rotor rotation. This causes the
stator flux to induce rotor currents, which create a rotor flux with magnetic polarity opposite to
stator. In this way, the rotor is dragged along behind stator flux, with the currents in the rotor
induced at the slip frequency.
In generator operation, a prime mover (turbine, engine) drives the rotor above the synchronous
speed (negative slip). The stator flux still induces currents in the rotor, but since the opposing
rotor flux is now cutting the stator coils, an active current is produced in stator coils and the
motor now operates as a generator, sending power back to the electrical grid.
Excitation
Active power
Active power delivered to the line is proportional to slip above the synchronous speed. Full rated
power of the generator is reached at very small slip values (motor dependent, typically 3%). At
synchronous speed of 1800 rpm, generator will produce no power. When the driving speed is
increased to 1860 rpm, full output power is produced. If the prime mover is unable to produce
enough power to fully drive the generator, speed will remain somewhere between 1800 and 1860
rpm range.
Required capacitance
A capacitor bank must supply reactive power to the motor when used in stand-alone mode.The
reactive power supplied should be equal or greater than the reactive power that the machine
normally draws when operating as a motor. Terminal voltage will increase with capacitance, but
is limited by iron saturation.
Example application
We must use 10 hp, 1760 r/min, 440 V, 3 phase induction motor as an asynchronous generator.
Full-load current of the motor is 10 A and full-load power factor is 0.8.
Required capacitance per phase if capacitors are connected in delta:
Apparent power S = 3 E I = 1.73 * 440 * 10 = 7612 VA
Active power P = S cos = 7612 * 0.8 = 6090 W
Reactive power Q =
= 4567 VAR
For machine to run as an asynchronous generator, capacitor bank must supply minimum 4567 / 3
phases = 1523 VAR per phase. Voltage per capacitor is 440 V because capacitors are connected
in delta.
Capacitive current Ic = Q/E = 1523/440 = 3.46 A
Capacitive reactance per phase Xc = E/I = 127
Minimum capacitance per phase:
C = 1 / (2**f*Xc) = 1 / (2 * 3.141 * 60 * 127) = 21 microfarads.
If load also absorbs reactive power, capacitor bank must be increased in size to compensate.