EITtraining
Electrical
- Mar 4, 2010
- 2
Hi all,
Not sure where to post this...
I have some trouble understanding equipment protection on a grid-tied PV system, specifically when there's a backup generator behind a transfer switch supplying the same load.
UL1741 specifies that the inverter should disconnect if it senses undervoltage, frequency variation and that it should have anti-islanding protection for safety reasons in case of an outage.
But what happens when the backup generator kicks in? I'm assuming if the inverter is grid-tied, it will see this power, interpret that the utility is back and connect to the system. My questions are:
1) Will the inverter actually connect after the standby generator powers up?
2) Assuming it will... if both generator (backup and solar) are about the same size, and their combined output power is higher than the load, what will prevent them from feeding each other (remember i can't return any excess to the utility because there's an outage). How does this "reverse power" protection actually works?
3) Is there any control on inverters to reduce their power output? Maybe disconnecting modules and sacrificing potential output for safety reasons. Let's say you have a 10kW inverter system supplying a 6kW load at noon on a sunny summer day. Are inverters smart enough to detect this and control their output accordingly? How?
Can anyone help or point me to reading resources for this specific information? Feel free to insult if the questions seem stupid -
Not sure where to post this...
I have some trouble understanding equipment protection on a grid-tied PV system, specifically when there's a backup generator behind a transfer switch supplying the same load.
UL1741 specifies that the inverter should disconnect if it senses undervoltage, frequency variation and that it should have anti-islanding protection for safety reasons in case of an outage.
But what happens when the backup generator kicks in? I'm assuming if the inverter is grid-tied, it will see this power, interpret that the utility is back and connect to the system. My questions are:
1) Will the inverter actually connect after the standby generator powers up?
2) Assuming it will... if both generator (backup and solar) are about the same size, and their combined output power is higher than the load, what will prevent them from feeding each other (remember i can't return any excess to the utility because there's an outage). How does this "reverse power" protection actually works?
3) Is there any control on inverters to reduce their power output? Maybe disconnecting modules and sacrificing potential output for safety reasons. Let's say you have a 10kW inverter system supplying a 6kW load at noon on a sunny summer day. Are inverters smart enough to detect this and control their output accordingly? How?
Can anyone help or point me to reading resources for this specific information? Feel free to insult if the questions seem stupid -