This document provides information about a course on power quality including the instructor's contact information, recommended books, evaluation criteria, and an overview of power quality concerns such as power frequency disturbances, transients, harmonics, grounding and bonding, electromagnetic interference, radio frequency interference, electrostatic discharge, and power factor.
This document provides information about a course on power quality including the instructor's contact information, recommended books, evaluation criteria, and an overview of power quality concerns such as power frequency disturbances, transients, harmonics, grounding and bonding, electromagnetic interference, radio frequency interference, electrostatic discharge, and power factor.
Email: [email protected]; [email protected] Recommended and reference Books • Electrical Power Systems Quality by Dugan, McGranaghan, Santoso, Beaty, McGraw Hill, 2nd Edition.
• Power quality by C. Sankaran
• Power Quality in Electrical Systems by Alexander Kusko,
Marc T. Thompson, McGraw Hill, 1st Edition.
• Electric Power Quality by Surajit Chattopadhyay,
Madhuchhanda Mitra, Samarjit Sengupta, Springers Edition Evaluation Criteria: • Mid term: 30% • Final term: 50% • Assignments & Quizes: 10% • Presentation & Attendance: 10% What is Power Quality? • Definition: • IEEE (Standard IEEE1100) defines power quality as “the concept of powering and grounding sensitive electronic equipment in a manner suitable for the equipment.” What is Power Quality? • A simpler and perhaps more concise definition might state: • “Power quality is a set of electrical boundaries that allows a piece of equipment to function in its intended manner without significant loss of performance or life expectancy.” • This definition embraces two things that we demand from an electrical device: performance and life expectancy. Power Quality concerns Power Quality concerns • Power frequency disturbances are low- frequency phenomena that result in voltage sags or swells. These may be source or load generated due to faults or switching operations in a power system. The end results are the same as far as the susceptibility of electrical equipment is concerned. Power Quality concerns • Power system transients are fast, short- duration events that produce distortions such as notching, ringing, and impulse. The mechanisms by which transient energy is propagated in power lines, transferred to other electrical circuits, and eventually dissipated are different from the factors that affect power frequency disturbances. Power Quality concerns • Power system harmonics are low-frequency phenomena characterized by waveform distortion, which introduces harmonic frequency components. Voltage and current harmonics have undesirable effects on power system operation and power system components. In some instances, interaction between the harmonics and the power system parameters (R–L–C) can cause harmonics to multiply with severe consequences. Power Quality concerns • The subject of grounding and bonding is one of the more critical issues in power quality studies. Grounding is done for three reasons. • The fundamental objective of grounding is safety, and nothing that is done in an electrical system should compromise the safety of people who work in the environment; • The second objective of grounding and bonding is to provide a low- impedance path for the flow of fault current in case of a ground fault so that the protective device could isolate the faulted circuit from the power source. • The third use of grounding is to create a ground reference plane for sensitive electrical equipment. This is known as the signal reference ground (SRG). The configuration of the SRG may vary from user to user and from facility to facility. The SRG cannot be an isolated entity. It must be bonded to the safety ground of the facility to create a total ground system. Power Quality concerns • Electromagnetic interference (EMI) refers to the interaction between electric and magnetic fields and sensitive electronic circuits and devices. EMI is predominantly a high- frequency phenomenon. The mechanism of coupling EMI to sensitive devices is different from that for power frequency disturbances and electrical transients. The mitigation of the effects of EMI requires special techniques. Power Quality concerns • Radio frequency interference (RFI) is the interaction between conducted or radiated radio frequency fields and sensitive data and communication equipment. It is convenient to include RFI in the category of EMI, but the two phenomena are distinct. Power Quality concerns • Electrostatic discharge (ESD) is a very familiar and unpleasant occurrence. In our day-to-day lives, ESD is an uncomfortable nuisance we are subjected to when we open the door of a car or the refrigerated case in the supermarket. But, at high levels, ESD is harmful to electronic equipment, causing malfunction and damage. Power Quality concerns • Power factor is included for the sake of completing the power quality discussion. In some cases, low power factor is responsible for equipment damage due to component overload. For the most part, power factor is an economic issue in the operation of a power system. As utilities are increasingly faced with power demands that exceed generation capability, the penalty for low power factor is expected to increase. An understanding of the power factor and how to remedy low power factor conditions is not any less important than understanding other factors that determine the health of a power system.