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Mathematics of three-phase electric power

In electrical engineering, three-phase electric power systems have at least three conductors carrying alternating voltages that are offset in time by one-third of the period. A three-phase system may be arranged in delta (∆) or star (Y) (also denoted as wye in some areas, as symbolically it is similar to the letter 'Y'). A wye system allows the use of two different voltages from all three phases, such as a 230/400 V system which provides 230 V between the neutral (centre hub) and any one of the phases, and 400 V across any two phases. A delta system arrangement provides only one voltage, but it has a greater redundancy as it may continue to operate normally with one of the three supply windings offline, albeit at 57.7% of total capacity.[1] Harmonic current in the neutral may become very large if nonlinear loads are connected.

One voltage cycle of a three-phase system, labeled 0 to 360° (2π radians) along the time axis. The plotted line represents the variation of instantaneous voltage (or current) with respect to time. This cycle repeats with a frequency that depends on the power system.

Definitions edit

In a star (wye) connected topology, with rotation sequence L1 - L2 - L3, the time-varying instantaneous voltages can be calculated for each phase A,C,B respectively by:

 
 
 

where:

  is the peak voltage,
  is the phase angle in radians
  is the time in seconds
  is the frequency in cycles per second and
voltages L1-N, L2-N and L3-N are referenced to the star connection point.

Diagrams edit

The below images demonstrate how a system of six wires delivering three phases from an alternator may be replaced by just three. A three-phase transformer is also shown.

Balanced loads edit

Generally, in electric power systems, the loads are distributed as evenly as is practical among the phases. It is usual practice to discuss a balanced system first and then describe the effects of unbalanced systems as deviations from the elementary case.

Constant power transfer edit

An important property of three-phase power is that the instantaneous power available to a resistive load,  , is constant at all times. Indeed, let

 

To simplify the mathematics, we define a nondimensionalized power for intermediate calculations,  

 

Hence (substituting back):

 

Since we have eliminated   we can see that the total power does not vary with time. This is essential for keeping large generators and motors running smoothly.

Notice also that using the root mean square voltage  , the expression for   above takes the following more classic form:

 .

The load need not be resistive for achieving a constant instantaneous power since, as long as it is balanced or the same for all phases, it may be written as

 

so that the peak current is

 

for all phases and the instantaneous currents are

 
 
 

Now the instantaneous powers in the phases are

 
 
 

Using angle subtraction formulae:

 
 
 

which add up for a total instantaneous power

 

Since the three terms enclosed in square brackets are a three-phase system, they add up to zero and the total power becomes

 

or

 

showing the above contention.

Again, using the root mean square voltage  ,   can be written in the usual form

 .

No neutral current edit

For the case of equal loads on each of three phases, no net current flows in the neutral. The neutral current is the inverted vector sum of the line currents. See Kirchhoff's circuit laws.

 

We define a non-dimensionalized current,  :

 

Since we have shown that the neutral current is zero we can see that removing the neutral core will have no effect on the circuit, provided the system is balanced. Such connections are generally used only when the load on the three phases is part of the same piece of equipment (for example a three-phase motor), as otherwise switching loads and slight imbalances would cause large voltage fluctuations.

Unbalanced systems edit

In practice, systems rarely have perfectly balanced loads, currents, voltages and impedances in all three phases. The analysis of unbalanced cases is greatly simplified by the use of the techniques of symmetrical components. An unbalanced system is analysed as the superposition of three balanced systems, each with the positive, negative or zero sequence of balanced voltages.

When specifying wiring sizes in a three-phase system, we only need to know the magnitude of the phase and neutral currents. The neutral current can be determined by adding the three phase currents together as complex numbers and then converting from rectangular to polar co-ordinates. If the three-phase root mean square (RMS) currents are  ,  , and  , the neutral RMS current is:

 

which resolves to

 

The polar magnitude of this is the square root of the sum of the squares of the real and imaginary parts, which reduces to[2]

 

Non-linear loads edit

With linear loads, the neutral only carries the current due to imbalance between the phases. Devices that utilize rectifier-capacitor front ends (such as switch-mode power supplies for computers, office equipment and the like) introduce third order harmonics. Third harmonic currents are in-phase on each of the supply phases and therefore will add together in the neutral which can cause the neutral current in a wye system to exceed the phase currents.[3][4]

Revolving magnetic field edit

Any polyphase system, by virtue of the time displacement of the currents in the phases, makes it possible to easily generate a magnetic field that revolves at the line frequency. Such a revolving magnetic field makes polyphase induction motors possible. Indeed, where induction motors must run on single-phase power (such as is usually distributed in homes), the motor must contain some mechanism to produce a revolving field, otherwise the motor cannot generate any stand-still torque and will not start. The field produced by a single-phase winding can provide energy to a motor already rotating, but without auxiliary mechanisms the motor will not accelerate from a stop.

A rotating magnetic field of steady amplitude requires that all three phase currents be equal in magnitude, and accurately displaced one-third of a cycle in phase. Unbalanced operation results in undesirable effects on motors and generators.

Conversion to other phase systems edit

Provided two voltage waveforms have at least some relative displacement on the time axis, other than a multiple of a half-cycle, any other polyphase set of voltages can be obtained by an array of passive transformers. Such arrays will evenly balance the polyphase load between the phases of the source system. For example, balanced two-phase power can be obtained from a three-phase network by using two specially constructed transformers, with taps at 50% and 86.6% of the primary voltage. This Scott T connection produces a true two-phase system with 90° time difference between the phases. Another example is the generation of higher-phase-order systems for large rectifier systems, to produce a smoother DC output and to reduce the harmonic currents in the supply.

When three-phase is needed but only single-phase is readily available from the electricity supplier, a phase converter can be used to generate three-phase power from the single phase supply. A motor–generator is often used in factory industrial applications.

System measurements edit

In a three-phase system, at least two transducers are required to measure power when there is no neutral, or three transducers when there is a neutral.[5] Blondel's theorem states that the number of measurement elements required is one less than the number of current-carrying conductors.[6]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Delta and Wye 3-phase circuits" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2013-05-13. Retrieved 2012-11-21. public domain
  2. ^ Keljik, Jeffrey (2008). Electricity 3: Power Generation and Delivery. Clifton Park, NY: Cengage Learning/Delmar. p. 49. ISBN 978-1435400290.
  3. ^ Lowenstein, Michael. . IAEI Magazine. Archived from the original on 27 March 2011. Retrieved 24 November 2012.
  4. ^ Enjeti, Prasad. "Harmonics in Low Voltage Three-Phase Four-Wire Electric Distribution Systems and Filtering Solutions" (PDF). Texas A&M University Power Electronics and Power Quality Laboratory. (PDF) from the original on 13 June 2010. Retrieved 24 November 2012.
  5. ^ "Measurement of three-phase power with the 2-wattmeter method" (PDF).[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-02-21.
  • Stevenson, William D. Jr. (1975). Elements of Power Systems Analysis. McGraw-Hill Electrical and Electronic Engineering Series (3rd ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-061285-4.

mathematics, three, phase, electric, power, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Mathematics of three phase electric power news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message In electrical engineering three phase electric power systems have at least three conductors carrying alternating voltages that are offset in time by one third of the period A three phase system may be arranged in delta or star Y also denoted as wye in some areas as symbolically it is similar to the letter Y A wye system allows the use of two different voltages from all three phases such as a 230 400 V system which provides 230 V between the neutral centre hub and any one of the phases and 400 V across any two phases A delta system arrangement provides only one voltage but it has a greater redundancy as it may continue to operate normally with one of the three supply windings offline albeit at 57 7 of total capacity 1 Harmonic current in the neutral may become very large if nonlinear loads are connected One voltage cycle of a three phase system labeled 0 to 360 2p radians along the time axis The plotted line represents the variation of instantaneous voltage or current with respect to time This cycle repeats with a frequency that depends on the power system Contents 1 Definitions 2 Diagrams 3 Balanced loads 3 1 Constant power transfer 3 2 No neutral current 4 Unbalanced systems 4 1 Non linear loads 5 Revolving magnetic field 6 Conversion to other phase systems 7 System measurements 8 See also 9 ReferencesDefinitions editIn a star wye connected topology with rotation sequence L1 L2 L3 the time varying instantaneous voltages can be calculated for each phase A C B respectively by V L 1 N V P sin 8 displaystyle V L1 N V P sin left theta right nbsp V L 2 N V P sin 8 2 3 p V P sin 8 4 3 p displaystyle V L2 N V P sin left theta frac 2 3 pi right V P sin left theta frac 4 3 pi right nbsp V L 3 N V P sin 8 4 3 p V P sin 8 2 3 p displaystyle V L3 N V P sin left theta frac 4 3 pi right V P sin left theta frac 2 3 pi right nbsp where V P displaystyle V P nbsp is the peak voltage 8 2 p f t displaystyle theta 2 pi ft nbsp is the phase angle in radianst displaystyle t nbsp is the time in seconds f displaystyle f nbsp is the frequency in cycles per second and dd voltages L1 N L2 N and L3 N are referenced to the star connection point Diagrams editThe below images demonstrate how a system of six wires delivering three phases from an alternator may be replaced by just three A three phase transformer is also shown nbsp Elementary six wire three phase alternator with each phase using a separate pair of transmission wires nbsp Elementary three wire three phase alternator showing how the phases can share only three transmission wires nbsp Each phase of a three phase transformer has its own pair of windings with a shared core Balanced loads editGenerally in electric power systems the loads are distributed as evenly as is practical among the phases It is usual practice to discuss a balanced system first and then describe the effects of unbalanced systems as deviations from the elementary case Constant power transfer edit An important property of three phase power is that the instantaneous power available to a resistive load P V I V 2 R displaystyle scriptstyle P VI frac V 2 R nbsp is constant at all times Indeed let P L i V L i 2 R P T O T i P L i displaystyle begin aligned P Li amp frac V Li 2 R P TOT amp sum i P Li end aligned nbsp To simplify the mathematics we define a nondimensionalized power for intermediate calculations p 1 V P 2 P T O T R displaystyle scriptstyle p frac 1 V P 2 P TOT R nbsp p sin 2 8 sin 2 8 2 3 p sin 2 8 4 3 p 3 2 displaystyle p sin 2 theta sin 2 left theta frac 2 3 pi right sin 2 left theta frac 4 3 pi right frac 3 2 nbsp Hence substituting back P T O T 3 V P 2 2 R displaystyle P TOT frac 3V P 2 2R nbsp Since we have eliminated 8 displaystyle theta nbsp we can see that the total power does not vary with time This is essential for keeping large generators and motors running smoothly Notice also that using the root mean square voltage V V p 2 displaystyle V frac V p sqrt 2 nbsp the expression for P T O T displaystyle P TOT nbsp above takes the following more classic form P T O T 3 V 2 R displaystyle P TOT frac 3V 2 R nbsp The load need not be resistive for achieving a constant instantaneous power since as long as it is balanced or the same for all phases it may be written as Z Z e j f displaystyle Z Z e j varphi nbsp so that the peak current is I P V P Z displaystyle I P frac V P Z nbsp for all phases and the instantaneous currents are I L 1 I P sin 8 f displaystyle I L1 I P sin left theta varphi right nbsp I L 2 I P sin 8 2 3 p f displaystyle I L2 I P sin left theta frac 2 3 pi varphi right nbsp I L 3 I P sin 8 4 3 p f displaystyle I L3 I P sin left theta frac 4 3 pi varphi right nbsp Now the instantaneous powers in the phases are P L 1 V L 1 I L 1 V P I P sin 8 sin 8 f displaystyle P L1 V L1 I L1 V P I P sin left theta right sin left theta varphi right nbsp P L 2 V L 2 I L 2 V P I P sin 8 2 3 p sin 8 2 3 p f displaystyle P L2 V L2 I L2 V P I P sin left theta frac 2 3 pi right sin left theta frac 2 3 pi varphi right nbsp P L 3 V L 3 I L 3 V P I P sin 8 4 3 p sin 8 4 3 p f displaystyle P L3 V L3 I L3 V P I P sin left theta frac 4 3 pi right sin left theta frac 4 3 pi varphi right nbsp Using angle subtraction formulae P L 1 V P I P 2 cos f cos 2 8 f displaystyle P L1 frac V P I P 2 left cos left varphi right cos left 2 theta varphi right right nbsp P L 2 V P I P 2 cos f cos 2 8 4 3 p f displaystyle P L2 frac V P I P 2 left cos left varphi right cos left 2 theta frac 4 3 pi varphi right right nbsp P L 3 V P I P 2 cos f cos 2 8 8 3 p f displaystyle P L3 frac V P I P 2 left cos left varphi right cos left 2 theta frac 8 3 pi varphi right right nbsp which add up for a total instantaneous power P T O T V P I P 2 3 cos f cos 2 8 f cos 2 8 4 3 p f cos 2 8 8 3 p f displaystyle P TOT frac V P I P 2 left 3 cos varphi left cos left 2 theta varphi right cos left 2 theta frac 4 3 pi varphi right cos left 2 theta frac 8 3 pi varphi right right right nbsp Since the three terms enclosed in square brackets are a three phase system they add up to zero and the total power becomes P T O T 3 V P I P 2 cos f displaystyle P TOT frac 3V P I P 2 cos varphi nbsp or P T O T 3 V P 2 2 Z cos f displaystyle P TOT frac 3V P 2 2 Z cos varphi nbsp showing the above contention Again using the root mean square voltage V V p 2 displaystyle V frac V p sqrt 2 nbsp P T O T displaystyle P TOT nbsp can be written in the usual form P T O T 3 V 2 Z cos f displaystyle P TOT frac 3V 2 Z cos varphi nbsp No neutral current edit For the case of equal loads on each of three phases no net current flows in the neutral The neutral current is the inverted vector sum of the line currents See Kirchhoff s circuit laws I L 1 V L 1 N R I L 2 V L 2 N R I L 3 V L 3 N R I N I L 1 I L 2 I L 3 displaystyle begin aligned I L1 amp frac V L1 N R I L2 frac V L2 N R I L3 frac V L3 N R I N amp I L1 I L2 I L3 end aligned nbsp We define a non dimensionalized current i I N R V P displaystyle i frac I N R V P nbsp i sin 8 sin 8 2 p 3 sin 8 2 p 3 sin 8 2 sin 8 cos 2 p 3 sin 8 sin 8 0 displaystyle begin aligned i amp sin left theta right sin left theta frac 2 pi 3 right sin left theta frac 2 pi 3 right amp sin left theta right 2 sin left theta right cos left frac 2 pi 3 right amp sin left theta right sin left theta right amp 0 end aligned nbsp Since we have shown that the neutral current is zero we can see that removing the neutral core will have no effect on the circuit provided the system is balanced Such connections are generally used only when the load on the three phases is part of the same piece of equipment for example a three phase motor as otherwise switching loads and slight imbalances would cause large voltage fluctuations Unbalanced systems editIn practice systems rarely have perfectly balanced loads currents voltages and impedances in all three phases The analysis of unbalanced cases is greatly simplified by the use of the techniques of symmetrical components An unbalanced system is analysed as the superposition of three balanced systems each with the positive negative or zero sequence of balanced voltages When specifying wiring sizes in a three phase system we only need to know the magnitude of the phase and neutral currents The neutral current can be determined by adding the three phase currents together as complex numbers and then converting from rectangular to polar co ordinates If the three phase root mean square RMS currents are I L 1 displaystyle I L1 nbsp I L 2 displaystyle I L2 nbsp and I L 3 displaystyle I L3 nbsp the neutral RMS current is I L 1 I L 2 cos 2 3 p j I L 2 sin 2 3 p I L 3 cos 4 3 p j I L 3 sin 4 3 p displaystyle I L1 I L2 cos left frac 2 3 pi right jI L2 sin left frac 2 3 pi right I L3 cos left frac 4 3 pi right jI L3 sin left frac 4 3 pi right nbsp which resolves to I L 1 I L 2 1 2 I L 3 1 2 j 3 2 I L 2 I L 3 displaystyle I L1 I L2 frac 1 2 I L3 frac 1 2 j frac sqrt 3 2 left I L2 I L3 right nbsp The polar magnitude of this is the square root of the sum of the squares of the real and imaginary parts which reduces to 2 I L 1 2 I L 2 2 I L 3 2 I L 1 I L 2 I L 1 I L 3 I L 2 I L 3 displaystyle sqrt I L1 2 I L2 2 I L3 2 I L1 I L2 I L1 I L3 I L2 I L3 nbsp Non linear loads edit With linear loads the neutral only carries the current due to imbalance between the phases Devices that utilize rectifier capacitor front ends such as switch mode power supplies for computers office equipment and the like introduce third order harmonics Third harmonic currents are in phase on each of the supply phases and therefore will add together in the neutral which can cause the neutral current in a wye system to exceed the phase currents 3 4 Revolving magnetic field editAny polyphase system by virtue of the time displacement of the currents in the phases makes it possible to easily generate a magnetic field that revolves at the line frequency Such a revolving magnetic field makes polyphase induction motors possible Indeed where induction motors must run on single phase power such as is usually distributed in homes the motor must contain some mechanism to produce a revolving field otherwise the motor cannot generate any stand still torque and will not start The field produced by a single phase winding can provide energy to a motor already rotating but without auxiliary mechanisms the motor will not accelerate from a stop A rotating magnetic field of steady amplitude requires that all three phase currents be equal in magnitude and accurately displaced one third of a cycle in phase Unbalanced operation results in undesirable effects on motors and generators Conversion to other phase systems editProvided two voltage waveforms have at least some relative displacement on the time axis other than a multiple of a half cycle any other polyphase set of voltages can be obtained by an array of passive transformers Such arrays will evenly balance the polyphase load between the phases of the source system For example balanced two phase power can be obtained from a three phase network by using two specially constructed transformers with taps at 50 and 86 6 of the primary voltage This Scott T connection produces a true two phase system with 90 time difference between the phases Another example is the generation of higher phase order systems for large rectifier systems to produce a smoother DC output and to reduce the harmonic currents in the supply When three phase is needed but only single phase is readily available from the electricity supplier a phase converter can be used to generate three phase power from the single phase supply A motor generator is often used in factory industrial applications System measurements editIn a three phase system at least two transducers are required to measure power when there is no neutral or three transducers when there is a neutral 5 Blondel s theorem states that the number of measurement elements required is one less than the number of current carrying conductors 6 See also editCharles Proteus Steinmetz Galileo Ferraris John Hopkinson Mikhail Dolivo Dobrovolsky Nikola Tesla Polyphase system Three phase electric power Y D transformReferences edit Delta and Wye 3 phase circuits PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2013 05 13 Retrieved 2012 11 21 public domain Keljik Jeffrey 2008 Electricity 3 Power Generation and Delivery Clifton Park NY Cengage Learning Delmar p 49 ISBN 978 1435400290 Lowenstein Michael The 3rd Harmonic Blocking Filter A Well Established Approach to Harmonic Current Mitigation IAEI Magazine Archived from the original on 27 March 2011 Retrieved 24 November 2012 Enjeti Prasad Harmonics in Low Voltage Three Phase Four Wire Electric Distribution Systems and Filtering Solutions PDF Texas A amp M University Power Electronics and Power Quality Laboratory Archived PDF from the original on 13 June 2010 Retrieved 24 November 2012 Measurement of three phase power with the 2 wattmeter method PDF permanent dead link THE TWO METER WATTMETER METHOD PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2014 02 21 Stevenson William D Jr 1975 Elements of Power Systems Analysis McGraw Hill Electrical and Electronic Engineering Series 3rd ed New York McGraw Hill ISBN 0 07 061285 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mathematics of three phase electric power amp oldid 1187765739, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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