trosepe
Electrical
- Mar 28, 2009
- 82
I have been asked to investigate two cases where a 3MW generator circuit breaker has tripped on loss of excitation and reverse power when the connected UPS is placed in bypass. The UPS load is 2MW and the loads are PDU's for a server farm. When the system is operating normally the PF is .95 lag. When in bypass the PF is .85 lead. There are no PF correction capacitors on the system and only the one generator. The transfer switch is open transition.
My theory is that the UPS controls the system PF by adjusting the firing angle of the SCR's. When the system is placed in bypass, the PDU's are connected directly to the supply. The leading PF is from the filter capacitance on the front end of the switching power supplies on the blade servers. When the UPS is connected to the generator and then placed in bypass; the generator voltage regulator has a problem with the leading PF and underexcites the field.
I don't have much expertise in generator control to know if I am close or should be looking at something else. Does anyone have experience with how generator regulators respond to leading PF and if the loss of excitation and reverse power(set at 35KW) relay operation makes sense here.
Also any suggestions on a fix? One suggestion has been to connect a reactive load bank to the generator that is connected anytime the UPS is placed in bypass while connected to the generator. The reactance level would be selected to bring the PF back to .95 lag when on generator.
My theory is that the UPS controls the system PF by adjusting the firing angle of the SCR's. When the system is placed in bypass, the PDU's are connected directly to the supply. The leading PF is from the filter capacitance on the front end of the switching power supplies on the blade servers. When the UPS is connected to the generator and then placed in bypass; the generator voltage regulator has a problem with the leading PF and underexcites the field.
I don't have much expertise in generator control to know if I am close or should be looking at something else. Does anyone have experience with how generator regulators respond to leading PF and if the loss of excitation and reverse power(set at 35KW) relay operation makes sense here.
Also any suggestions on a fix? One suggestion has been to connect a reactive load bank to the generator that is connected anytime the UPS is placed in bypass while connected to the generator. The reactance level would be selected to bring the PF back to .95 lag when on generator.