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Basic Power Engineering

Rms phasor representation of voltage is given in 3 forms: Exponential Polar Rectangular Euler's identity rectangular phasor diagram. Phasing is the process of converting A polar to A rectangular form.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
125 views

Basic Power Engineering

Rms phasor representation of voltage is given in 3 forms: Exponential Polar Rectangular Euler's identity rectangular phasor diagram. Phasing is the process of converting A polar to A rectangular form.

Uploaded by

Alex Ferguson
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 37

Basic Power Engineering

Topic 1:
FUNDAMENTAL

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 1


Objectives:
To review basic concepts and establish
terminology & notation for :-

Phasor
Instantaneous power
Complex power
Balanced 3 phase circuit

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 2


Phasor
Instantaneous Voltage:

υ(t ) = Vm cos(ωt + θυ )
Instantaneous Max value Phase angle
value

Instantaneous Current:

i ( t ) = I m cos( ω t + θ i )

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 3


Phasor Representation
The rms phasor representation of voltage is given in 3 forms:
Exponential
Polar
Rectangular

Euler’s identity
rms value

jθv
V = Ve = V∠θv = V cosθv + jV sinθv
rms phasor
{ { {
exponential polar rectangular

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 4


Phasor Diagram
Euler’s identity :

e = cos φ + j sin φ

jθv
V = Ve = V∠θ v = V cosθv + jV sinθv
Imaginary axis

How to convert
from polar to V j V sinθ
rectangular form? v

θ v
Real axis
V cos θ v

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 5


Value Indicator
Lowercase letter v(t), i(t)
Instantaneous values
Uppercase letter V, I
rms values
Uppercase letter in italic V, I
rms phasors

When voltage or current values are specified, they


shall be rms values unless otherwise indicated

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 6


RLC elements
Relationships between phasors V and I for constant R,L and C
elements with sinusoidal steady-state excitation
IC
IR IL

1
− jX C Ω = V
RΩ V jX L Ω = jω L V jω C

V V V
IR = IL = IC =
- jXC
R jX L
IC
V V
IR IL V

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 7


Instantaneous Power
The instantaneous power
i(t ) delivered to the load:
+ p (t ) = v (t ) i (t )
v(t)
- = V m I m cos( ω t + θ v ) cos( ω t + θ i )

θ = θv − θi
p(t ) = V I cosθ [1 + cos 2(ωt + θ v )] + V I sin θ sin 2(ωt + θ v )
{
Energy flow into Energy borrowed and
the circuit returned by the circuit
BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 8
Instantaneous power deliver to the load:
p (t ) = v (t ) i (t )
= V m I m cos ( ω t + θ v ) cos ( ω t + θ i ) ,* trigonomet ri identiti :
142 4 3 142 4 3
A B

M = cos A cos B =
1
[cos( A − B ) + cos( A + B ) ]
2
1
= V m I m cos( θ v − θ i ) + cos ( 2 ω t + θ v + θ i )
2 1 442 4 43
= 2 ( ω t + θ v ) − (θ v − θ i )

1
= V m I m cos( θ v − θ i ) + cos[ 2 ( ω t + θ v ) − (θ v − θ i ) ] * trigonomer tri identiti :
2 142 43 142 4 3
A B

M = cos( A − B ) = cos A cos B + sin A sin B


1
= V m I m [cos( θ v − θ i ) + cos 2 ( ω t + θ v ) cos( θ v − θ i ) + sin 2 ( ω t + θ v ) sin( θ v − θ i )]
2
1 1
M I mV m = V ( 2 ) × I( 2 )
2 2
M = V I
= V I [cos( θ v − θ i ) + cos 2 ( ω t + θ v ) cos( θ v − θ i ) + sin 2 ( ω t + θ v ) sin( θ v − θ i ) ]

assume θv −θi = θ,

= V I cos θ [1 + cos 2 ( ω t + θ v )] + V I sin θ sin 2 ( ω t + θ v )

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 9


Example 1.1:

V(t) = 100 cos ωt and the load is


i(t) inductive with impedance
Z=1.25∠600 Ω.
+
v(t) Determine the expression for the
- instantaneous current i(t) and
instantaneous power p(t)

Answer:
i(t ) = 80 cos(ωt − 600 ) A
p(t ) = v(t )i(t ) = 8000cosωt cos(ωt − 600 ) W

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 10


Example 1.1: cont……

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 11


Complex Power
rms voltage phasor: V = V ∠θ v

rms current phasor: I = I ∠θ i


V

S
θ I Q
θv θ
θi
P
Phasor diagram & power triangle for an inductive load
(lagging PF)

VI * = V I ∠θ v − θ i = V I ∠θ

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 12


Complex Power : cont…….
VI * = V I ∠ (θ v − θ i ) = V I ∠ θ
= V I cos θ + j V I sin θ
142 4 3 142 4 3
P Q
Apparent Real
power power

S = VI = P + jQ
*
Reactive
power

•Direct indication of heating


Magnitude: S = P2 + Q2 •Used as a rating unit of power
equipment
BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 13
Capacitive & inductive load
V
Phasor diagram for a
S
Q inductive load
θ I θ
θv θi
P
I lags V (lagging PF)

I V
P
Phasor diagram for a θ
θ
capacitive load Q
θv S
θi
I leads V (leading PF) (Q is negative)

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 14


Impedance of the complex power

V = ZI
S = VI = ZII = R I + jX I
* * 2 2

or
* 2
VV V
S = VI = * = *
*

Z Z
2
V
∴Z = *
S

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 15


The Complex Power Balance

The total complex power delivered to the loads in parallel


Is the sum of the complex powers delivered to each

I I1 I2 I3

V Z1 Z2 Z3

S = VI *
= V [ I 1 + I 2 + I 3 ]*
= VI 1 + VI 2 + VI 3
* * *

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 16


Example 1.2:

V = 1200∠00
I I1 I2 I3
Z1 = 60 + j0 Ω
V Z1 Z2 Z3 Z2 = 6 + j12 Ω
Z3 = 30 – j30 Ω

Find the power absorbed by each load and the total


complex power

Answers:
S 1 = 24 , 000 W + j 0 var
S 2 = 48 , 000 W + j 96 , 000 var
S 3 = 24 , 000 W − j 24 , 000 var
S = 96 , 000 W + j 72 , 000 var

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 17


Power Factor

V I cos θ
Pf = cos θ
P
Pf = =
S V I

If pf < 1, the current that must be supplied will become


larger
for utility company, this will increase the cost.
additional charge for operation at low power factor
To improve power factor, install capacitor to make pf
close to unity

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 18


Example 1.3 : Power Factor Correction

Two loads Z1 = 100 + j0 Ω and Z2 = 10 + j20Ω are connected


across a 200-Vrms, 60 Hz source.

a) Find the total real & reactive power, the power factor at the
source, and the total current
b) Find the capacitance of the capacitor connected across the
loads to improve the overall power factor to 0.8 lagging

Answers : C = 46.42µF

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 19


Balanced 3φ Circuits

Advantages of 3φ compared to 1 φ

Instantaneous power delivered to the external loads is


constant
Æ3φ motor having constant torque
ÆStart & run much better than 1φ
In transmission line for 3φ, less wire is required for the
same delivered power

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 20


Balanced 3φ Circuits : cont….
Balanced source:
3 sinusoidal voltages generated, having the same amplitude
but displaced by 1200
Negative phase sequence ÎACB
ECn
EBn

EAn
EAn

EBn
Positive phase sequence ÎABC ECn

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 21


Generators are usually has Y (star)-connected. WHY?

´Because, if U-connected, if the voltages are not


perfectly balanced, there will be a net voltage and
consequently a circulating current, around the U.

´Phase voltages are lower in the Y-connected : less


insulation is required

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 22


Y – connected generator supplying Y- connected load

Generated voltages:

E An = E p ∠ 0 0
E Bn = E p ∠ − 120 0
E Cn = E p ∠ − 240 0

For phase A;

VAn = E An − Z G I a
Van = VAn − Z L I a

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 23


Y – connected Loads
Assumption :
Positive sequence / ABC
Objective :
To find the relationship between the line voltages (VL-L) and the
phase voltages (VL-n)
Reference :
Line to neutral voltage of the “phase A”, Van

V an = V p ∠ 0 0 Vp magnitude of the phase voltage


(line to neutral voltage)
V bn = V p ∠ − 120 0
3 sinusoidal voltages generated,
V cn = V p ∠ − 240 0 having the same amplitude but
displaced by 1200

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 24


Line voltages at the load terminals

Application of Kirchhoff’s voltage low;

Vab = Van − Vbn = Vp (1∠00 − 1∠ − 1200 ) = 3 Vp ∠300

Vbc = Vbn − Vcn = V p (1∠ − 1200 − 1∠ − 2400 ) = 3 V p ∠ − 900

Vbc = Vbn −Vcn = Vp (1∠−1200 −1∠− 2400 ) = 3Vp ∠− 900

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 25


Phasor diagram – phase and line voltages

V an = V p ∠ 0 0
Vcn
V bn = V p ∠ − 120 0
Vca Vab

V cn = V p ∠ − 240 0
300
Van
Vab = Van −Vbn = Vp (1∠0 −1∠−120 ) = 3Vp ∠30
0 0 0

Vbc = Vbn −Vcn = Vp (1∠−1200 −1∠− 2400 ) = 3Vp ∠− 900


Vbn
Vbc =Vbn −Vcn = Vp (1∠−120 −1∠−240) = 3Vp ∠−90
0 0 0

Vbc
Line voltage
(rms value)
V L = 3 V p ∠30 0

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 26


Three phase current Ia, Ib, Ic : Y - connected

Van
Ia = = I p ∠ −θ
Zp Impedance phase angle
Vbn
Ib = = I p ∠ − 120 0 − θ
Zp
Vcn
Ic = = I p ∠ − 240 0 − θ
Zp

Line currents = phase currents


(current carried by the phase impedance)

IL = IP

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 27


∆ – connected Loads
Ia Line voltages = phase voltages
a
Iab
Zp
Ib V L = VP
b Zp
Ica
Zp
Ic Ibc Phase currents:
c
I ab = I p ∠ 0 0
Reference
│IP │ Magnitude of the I bc = I p ∠ − 120 0

phase current I ca = I p ∠ − 240 0

What is the relationship between phase & line current??

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 28


Line current : U - connected

Ia
a
Iab
Zp I L = 3 I p ∠ − 30 0
Ib
b Zp
Ica
Zp Line current Currents lags the
Ic Ibc
c phase currents by 300

Application of Kirchhoff’s current law;

I a = I ab − I ca = I p (1∠0 0 − 1∠ − 240 0 ) = 3 I p ∠ − 30 0
I b = I bc − I ab = I p (1∠ − 120 0 − 1∠0 0 ) = 3 I p ∠ − 150 0
I c = I ca − I bc = I p (1∠ − 240 0 − 1∠ − 120 0 ) = 3 I p ∠90 0

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 29


Phasor diagram – phase & line current

Ic

I ab = I p ∠0 0
Ica
I bc = I p ∠ − 120 0
I ca = I p ∠ − 240 0

Iab
300
I a = I ab − I ca = 3 I p ∠ − 30 0
I b = I bc − I ab = 3 I p ∠ − 150 0
Ia
Ib Ibc
I c = I ca − I bc = 3 I p ∠90 0

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 30


∆ – Y transformation
For network analysis purposes,
→it is convenient to replace the U with equivalent Y circuit

Vab Vac Vab + Vac


For U-connected Ia = + =
Z∆ Z∆ Z∆
BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 31
∆ – Y transformation : cont…..
Objective : ¼ To find ZY from ZU

V ab + Vac = 3 Van ∠30 0 + 3 V an ∠ − 30 0


= 3Van
V ab + Vac
from previous equation : I a = ,
Vcn Z∆
Vab
3Van
300 Ia = V an = Z Y I a
Van Z∆
Z∆
Vac ∴ Van = Ia Z∆
Vbn 3 ZY =
3
Phasor diagram (Y-connected) ZY
BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 32
Per - Phase Analysis
The balanced power system problems
are solved on “PER_PHASE”analysis.
WHY ??
In = Ia + Ib + Ic = 0
In
In = 0, I a = Ib = Ic
{
Same current except for
the phase shift

If the load is connected in U,


Transform into Y
when load is balanced, ZY = ZU /3
Single-phase circuit Model the circuit using per-phase analysis

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 33


Balanced 3φ Power
Instantaneous voltages; For balanced load, phase current:

υ an = 2 V p cos( ω t + θ v ) ia = 2 I p cos(ωt + θ i )

υ bn = 2 V p cos( ω t + θ v − 120 0 ) ib = 2 I p cos(ωt + θ i − 120 0 )


υ cn = 2 V p cos( ω t + θ v − 240 0 ) ic = 2 I p cos(ωt + θ i − 240 0 )

rms phase voltage

Total instantaneous power is the sum of the instantaneous


power of each phase

p3θ = υ an ia + υ bn ib + υ cn ic

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 34


Instantaneous 3φ power
By using trigonometry; Double frequency
terms are out of
p 3θ = V p I p [cos( θ v − θ i ) + cos( 2ω t + θ v + θ i ) ] phase with each
[
+ V p I p cos(θ v − θ i ) + cos( 2ω t + θ v + θ i − 240 0 ) ] other by 1200 and
equal to “0”
+ Vp I p [cos(θ v − θ i ) + cos( 2ω t + θ v + θ i − 480 0 )]

And instantaneous power is: Q 3φ = 3 V p I p sin θ

P3φ = 3 V p I p cos θ S 3φ = P3φ + jQ 3φ or


(θ = θ v − θ i )
S 3φ = 3V p I p
*

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 35


3φ power in term of line voltage & line current

For Y - connected

Vp =
VL
and I p = I L
P3φ = 3 VL I L cosθ
3
For U - connected
S 3φ = 3 V L I L sin θ
IL
V p = VL and Ip = rms value
3
P3φ = 3 V p I p cos θ
In term of phase voltage Q 3 φ = 3 V p I p sin θ

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 36


Example 1.4 :

A three-phase line has an impedance of 2+j4 Ω as shown below,


ZY = 30 +j40 Ω
ZU= 60-j45 Ω
Supply line voltage , |VL | = 207.85
Reference = Phase voltage Va

Determine:
a) The current, real power & reactive power drawn from the supply
b) Line voltage at the combined loads
c) Current per-phase in each load
d) Total real & reactive powers in each load and the line.

BEKP 2443 5 January 2006 37

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