jimgineer
Electrical
- Jun 3, 2008
- 80
All,
This is something that I am new to, but I have heard this mentioned as something that is possible to do.
It doesn't make much sense to me purely being able to do PF correction with software - I am imagining that all the software does is act in a control loop to control the amount of VARs introduced into the circuit, depending on the load.
In other words, it would simply determine what the lag of the current waveform was to the voltage waveform, and depending on that lag, vary the parallel/series combination of some capacitance to get the correct amount of VARs in the system to get the PF close to 1.
I have a couple of questions here:
1) Can anyone think of a way to impact the pf of a system without having any capacitor bank or introducing some imaginary component of impedence to the load? Or is this chasing a white rabbit?
2) What practical implementations have actually been implemented with this? For example, in a substation does a utility generally assume a typical 'range' of pf that it is feeding, and then just size a bank of capacitors appropriately, or is there actually any control logic going on there to try to get the pf as close to 1 as possible, that can vary the VARs introduced based on what loads and the pf of the load. If not, why not? I'm thinking this wouldn't be too expensive to implement, although there might be some challenges with power quality.
And, is this kind of related to switch mode power supply design? I never took any classes on those but I imagine that there are similiar design challenges feeding electonics as with large scale power systems. (Matching load impedence with source impedence I would imagine is a large consideration for SMPS?)
Thanks in advance
This is something that I am new to, but I have heard this mentioned as something that is possible to do.
It doesn't make much sense to me purely being able to do PF correction with software - I am imagining that all the software does is act in a control loop to control the amount of VARs introduced into the circuit, depending on the load.
In other words, it would simply determine what the lag of the current waveform was to the voltage waveform, and depending on that lag, vary the parallel/series combination of some capacitance to get the correct amount of VARs in the system to get the PF close to 1.
I have a couple of questions here:
1) Can anyone think of a way to impact the pf of a system without having any capacitor bank or introducing some imaginary component of impedence to the load? Or is this chasing a white rabbit?
2) What practical implementations have actually been implemented with this? For example, in a substation does a utility generally assume a typical 'range' of pf that it is feeding, and then just size a bank of capacitors appropriately, or is there actually any control logic going on there to try to get the pf as close to 1 as possible, that can vary the VARs introduced based on what loads and the pf of the load. If not, why not? I'm thinking this wouldn't be too expensive to implement, although there might be some challenges with power quality.
And, is this kind of related to switch mode power supply design? I never took any classes on those but I imagine that there are similiar design challenges feeding electonics as with large scale power systems. (Matching load impedence with source impedence I would imagine is a large consideration for SMPS?)
Thanks in advance