Harmonics
Harmonics
Harmonics
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Harmonic
Management
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Harmonic Management
Practical Exercise
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1. Why is it necessary to manage harmonics.
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Harmonic Disturbances
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Economic impact of Disturbances
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2. Definition and origin of harmonics.
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Definition
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Total Harmonic Distortion: THD
The Total Harmonic Distortion (THD) is an indicator of the distortion of a
signal. It is widely used in Electrical Engineering and Harmonic
management in particular.
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Origin of harmonics
Industrial equipment (welding machines, arc and induction furnaces,
battery chargers),
Variable Speed Drives for AC or DC motors,
Uninterruptible Power Supplies,
Office Equipment (PCs, printers, servers, etc.),
Household appliances (TV sets, microwave ovens, fluorescent lighting,
light dimmers).
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Origin of harmonics
The total system can be split into different circuits:
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Flow of harmonic current in distribution network
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3. Essential indicators of harmonic distortion
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A. Power Factor
The Power Factor must not be mixed-up with the Displacement
Power Factor (cos θ), relative to fundamental signals only.
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B. Crest Factor
The crest factor is the ratio between the value of the peak current or voltage (IM or UM)
and its r.m.s. value.
•For a sinusoidal signal, the crest factor is therefore equal to √2.
•For a non-sinusoidal signal, the crest factor can be either greater than or less than √2.
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C. Harmonic Spectrum
The harmonic spectrum is the representation of the amplitude of each harmonic
order with respect to its frequency.
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D. Usefulness of the various indicators
THDu is an indicator of the distortion of the voltage wave.
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4. Main effects of harmonics in electrical
installations
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A. Resonance
an installation made up of:
•A supply transformer,
•Linear loads
•Non-linear loads drawing harmonic currents
•Power factor correction capacitors
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A. Resonance
At the resonance frequency, impedance is at its maximum and high amounts of harmonic voltages
appear because of the circulation of harmonic currents. This results in major voltage distortion.
The distribution network and the power factor correction capacitors are subjected to high harmonic
currents and the resulting risk of overloads. To avoid resonance, antiharmonic reactors can be
installed in series with the capacitors.
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B. Increased Losses
The harmonic currents cause an increase of the Joule losses in all conductors in
which they flow and additional temperature rise in transformers, switchgear,
cables. 22
C. Neutral Conductor
In this example, the current in the neutral
conductor has a rms value that is higher
than the rms value of the current in a phase
by a factor equal to the square root of 3.
The neutral conductor must therefore be
sized accordingly.
However, when harmonic currents are circulating, the neutral current can be
significant, and even higher than the phase currents. This is due to the fact that
the 3rd harmonic currents of the three phases do not cancel each other, and sum
up in the neutral conductor.
This of course affects the current-carrying capacity of the cable, and a correction
factor shall be applied.
In addition, if the 3rd harmonic percentage h3 is greater than 33%, the neutral
current is greater than the phase current and the cable size selection is based on
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the neutral current..
C. Neutral Conductor
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5. Solutions to mitigate Harmonics
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A. Basic Solutions
Position the non-linear loads upstream in the system
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A. Basic Solutions
Create separate sources
Operating principle:
An LC circuit, tuned to each harmonic order to be
filtered, is installed in parallel with the non-linear
load. This bypass circuit absorbs the harmonics,
thus avoiding their flow in the distribution network.
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B. Harmonic Filtering
Active Filters
Typical applications
•Commercial installations with a set of non-linear
loads representing less than 500 kVA (variable-
speed drives, UPSs, offi ce equipment, etc.)
•Installations where current distortion must be
reduced to avoid overloads.
Operating principle
These systems, comprising power electronics and
installed in series or parallel with the non-linear load,
compensate the harmonic current or voltage drawn
by the load. The AHC injects in opposite phase the
harmonics drawn by the non-linear load, such that
the line current Is remains sinusoidal.
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B. Harmonic Filtering
Hybrid Filters
Typical applications
•Industrial installations with a set of non-linear loads
representing more than 500 kVA
•Installations requiring power-factor correction
•Installations where strict limits on harmonic
emissions must be met.
Operating principle
Passive and active filters are combined in a single
system to constitute a hybrid filter.
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6. Choice of Solutions
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Schneider Product offer
C-less technology
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Schneider Product offer
Active filters
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Schneider Product offer
Hybrid filter
A hybrid filter is a system including a passive
filter tuned on the 5th harmonic and a
SineWave active filter in a single unit.
Main characteristics:
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Schneider Electric Solutions
At installation level
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Schneider Electric Solutions
Guidance for a Solution
•If harmonic mitigation is necessary, global •When a large number of drives are present,
mitigation should be considered first. This is the implementation of chokes is recommended
because single large mitigation equipment (AC-line or DC-link chokes).
at the installation level is usually more cost
effective than several small ones at •When PFC capacitors are present, detuned
equipment level. banks should be preferred, with active filter if
further attenuation is needed. This will ensure
•When large drives are present, (≥400kW), capacitor protection and avoid resonance.
local mitigation is recommended. Typical
solutions include multi-pulse configurations, •When PFC capacitors are not present, an
Active Front End (AFE), and active filter. active filter is the preferred solution.
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Schneider Electric Solutions
Guidance for a Solution
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Practical Exercise
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