2 PF
2 PF
2 PF
1. Introduction
• A Load power factor defines the current flowing in lines and those being
produced from generators, voltage drops and losses in feeder, heating of
conductors, loading of switchyards, etc.
• Loads’ power factors also define the voltage magnitudes, which are
directly, related to the quantity and direction of reactive power flow
through the whole system.
• These terms are reflected in service continuity, and determine the power
quality for consumers.
2.1 Power Factor & Voltage and Current Waveforms:
where
P is the power in watts,
V is the RMS voltage in volts,
I is the total RMS load drawn current in
amperes and
is the phase angle between the voltage and the
current waveforms.
- In purely resistive AC electrical circuit, the voltage and the current
are in phase, as shown in fig. 1 (a), and the useful power available
from the circuit is maximized since the peaks of voltage and current
occur simultaneously.
- The power is the same as that consumed in a DC circuit having the
same values of voltage and current.
fig. 1 (a)
- When inductive loads are present in the system, the current tends to lag in time
behind the voltage, as seen in fig. 1(b).
- The amount of lag, or phase difference, is measured by the phase angle between
the two waves.
- Since V and I are no longer in phase, the useful power available from the circuit is
reduced from that with the pure resistive load drawing the same current magnitude
under the same voltage.
- The ratio of the useful power available from the inductive circuit to the maximum
useful power, consumed by a resistive load of the same current and voltage , is
called the power factor.
- The value of the power factor is the cosine of the phase angle difference .
fig. 1(b).
2.2 Inductive Loads:
• Inductive or (magnetic) devices are those, which contain coils, where the
current passing through the coil generates lines of flux of a magnetic
field.
• Without this magnetization, energy would not flow through the core of a
transformer, e.g., or across the air gap of a motor or through the choke of
a fluorescent lamp.
• This gives rise to the phase lag in the current waveform, shown before.
- This results in another way to describe power factor .
- The total current is made up of a magnetizing current and a working
current in a vector sum with the phase angle .
- The power factor is the ratio of the working current to the total
current.
Having the voltage V in kV, the currents Im, Ia, I in amperes, these
relations can be written as:
• Total or apparent power in KVA: S = V I (2)
• This penalty is applied when the measured power factor is less than
0.9 (in Egypt) and 0.86 (in USA and Europe).
• When the power factor is equal to or less than 0.6 but greater than
0.4 the penalty is effectively doubled and computed according to
the following formula:
• Other systems are adopted in USA and Europe and other countries.
6. Low Power Factor Effects:
2 2
P Q
I (12)
V V
• Therefore, low power factor or large amount of reactive power Q will lead to
more drawn current.
• At unity power factor (or Q = 0), the minimum current consumption will be
reached.
• While these losses are small in typical plants ( 2.5-7%), the effect
is much more important and pronounced on national transmission
and distribution networks.
Ploss RI 2 (13)
2 2
P Q
Ploss R R (14)
V V
• Once more, low power factor means high Q flow in distribution
system and the second term is function in the square of Q.
Improving power factor means less Q and less losses.
• Using the same conductor material, the new conductor cross section as a
percentage of the original value is given by:
I2
a 2 a1 (17)
I1
• The reduction in conductors cross section, for the same active power when
power factors are pf1, pf2 is given by:
Original power factor
2
% Reduction in feeder cross - section 1 - 100
(18)
Improved power fctor
7.5 Release of System Capacity ( more capacity to Other
Customers):
P kVA Q
2 2
(19)
•Therefore, at low power factors Q increases and the useful available power
decreases, this was shown earlier in Table (1).
•Improving the power factor decrease the transit Q and increases the
available useful power for other consumers and save the investment required
to feed those consumers
.
• Also, low power factor reduces the capacity of electrical
system, since the system must carry the total current, but
only the active current provides useful power.
XQ RP
V Vs Vr (20)
Vr
•As P is imposed by the consumer and the feeder is already installed
with its resistance R and reactance X defined , also Vs is assumed to
be constant by control action, the load voltage Vr is the variable with
the variations of the node received reactive power Q.
• Then in the next half cycle, the motor releases its excess
energy, and the capacitor is there to absorb it.
• Capacitors and reactive loads exchange this reactive
power back and forth.
• For induction motor load with star / delta starter switch, the
correct compensation by shunt capacitors, either fixed or
controlled, is shown in fig. (5)
• They are usually symmetrical for the three phases and can be used
as elements of the harmonic filters ( fig. 5a).
9. Calculation of the capacitors Rating:
• Capacitor units rated from 50 to over 500 kvar are available; Table
3.5 shows common capacitor unit ratings.
• Many common size banks only have one capacitor unit per phase.
Table (3.5) Common capacitor unit ratings
• Capacitors must have an internal resistor that discharges a capacitor
to 50 V or less within 5 min when the capacitor is charged to the
peak of its rated voltage.
• The resistor must be low enough such that the RC time constant
causes it to decay in 300 sec.
• The desired power factor: In Egypt where the electricity tariff’s specify a
power factor penalty if the power factor is less than 0.9, the most
economical degree of correction occur is found when the final power
factor is less than 0.9 ( or 0.86 in Europe)