PHASOR DIAGRAMS HANDS-ON RELAY SCHOOL WSU PULLMAN, WA.

Similar documents
PHASOR DIAGRAMS HANDS-ON RELAY SCHOOL WSU PULLMAN, WA. RON ALEXANDER - BPA

1 Phasors and Alternating Currents

RLC Series Circuit. We can define effective resistances for capacitors and inductors: 1 = Capacitive reactance:

EE 3120 Electric Energy Systems Study Guide for Prerequisite Test Wednesday, Jan 18, pm, Room TBA

Chapter 10: Sinusoidal Steady-State Analysis

Symmetrical Components. References

Sinusoidal Response of RLC Circuits

Chapter 33. Alternating Current Circuits

Electrical Circuits Lab Series RC Circuit Phasor Diagram

AC Circuits Homework Set

Alternating Current Circuits

Refresher course on Electrical fundamentals (Basics of A.C. Circuits) by B.M.Vyas

12. Introduction and Chapter Objectives

EXP. NO. 3 Power on (resistive inductive & capacitive) load Series connection

04-Electric Power. ECEGR 452 Renewable Energy Systems

Homework 2 SJTU233. Part A. Part B. Problem 2. Part A. Problem 1. Find the impedance Zab in the circuit seen in the figure. Suppose that R = 5 Ω.

Circuit Analysis-III. Circuit Analysis-II Lecture # 3 Friday 06 th April, 18

RLC Circuit (3) We can then write the differential equation for charge on the capacitor. The solution of this differential equation is

Chapter 5 Steady-State Sinusoidal Analysis

Basics of Electric Circuits

11. AC Circuit Power Analysis

Chapter 10: Sinusoidal Steady-State Analysis

LINEAR CIRCUIT ANALYSIS (EED) U.E.T. TAXILA 09

Physics-272 Lecture 20. AC Power Resonant Circuits Phasors (2-dim vectors, amplitude and phase)

I. Impedance of an R-L circuit.

Sinusoidal Steady-State Analysis

LO 1: Three Phase Circuits

SSC-JE EE POWER SYSTEMS: GENERATION, TRANSMISSION & DISTRIBUTION SSC-JE STAFF SELECTION COMMISSION ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING STUDY MATERIAL

SINUSOIDAL STEADY STATE CIRCUIT ANALYSIS

Electromagnetic Oscillations and Alternating Current. 1. Electromagnetic oscillations and LC circuit 2. Alternating Current 3.

ELECTROMAGNETIC OSCILLATIONS AND ALTERNATING CURRENT

Handout 11: AC circuit. AC generator

Consider a simple RC circuit. We might like to know how much power is being supplied by the source. We probably need to find the current.

Electromagnetic Induction Faraday s Law Lenz s Law Self-Inductance RL Circuits Energy in a Magnetic Field Mutual Inductance

LCR Series Circuits. AC Theory. Introduction to LCR Series Circuits. Module. What you'll learn in Module 9. Module 9 Introduction

Chapter 10: Sinusoids and Phasors

Course Updates. Reminders: 1) Assignment #10 due Today. 2) Quiz # 5 Friday (Chap 29, 30) 3) Start AC Circuits

Learnabout Electronics - AC Theory

EE221 - Practice for the Midterm Exam

Module 4. Single-phase AC Circuits

f = 1 T 6 a.c. (Alternating Current) Circuits Most signals of interest in electronics are periodic : they repeat regularly as a function of time.

Supplemental Notes on Complex Numbers, Complex Impedance, RLC Circuits, and Resonance

Three Phase Circuits

EXPERIMENT 07 TO STUDY DC RC CIRCUIT AND TRANSIENT PHENOMENA

mywbut.com Lesson 16 Solution of Current in AC Parallel and Seriesparallel

4/27 Friday. I have all the old homework if you need to collect them.

EDEXCEL NATIONALS UNIT 5 - ELECTRICAL AND ELECTRONIC PRINCIPLES. ASSIGNMENT No.2 - CAPACITOR NETWORK

This Unit may form part of a National Qualifications Group Award or may be offered on a freestanding

= 32.0\cis{38.7} = j Ω. Zab = Homework 2 SJTU233. Part A. Part B. Problem 2. Part A. Problem 1

BASIC NETWORK ANALYSIS

EE313 Fall 2013 Exam #1 (100 pts) Thursday, September 26, 2013 Name. 1) [6 pts] Convert the following time-domain circuit to the RMS Phasor Domain.

General Physics (PHY 2140)

Lectures 16 & 17 Sinusoidal Signals, Complex Numbers, Phasors, Impedance & AC Circuits. Nov. 7 & 9, 2011

Announcements: Today: more AC circuits

Power Factor Improvement

Z n. 100 kv. 15 kv. pu := 1. MVA := 1000.kW. Transformer nameplate data: X T_pu := 0.1pu S T := 10MVA. V L := 15kV. V H := 100kV

Electric Circuit Theory

Sinusoidal Steady State Analysis (AC Analysis) Part I

UNIT- I Phase Sequence:

Physics 4B Chapter 31: Electromagnetic Oscillations and Alternating Current

Module 25: Outline Resonance & Resonance Driven & LRC Circuits Circuits 2

Basics of Network Theory (Part-I)

REACTANCE. By: Enzo Paterno Date: 03/2013

Lecture 11 - AC Power

THREE PHASE SYSTEMS Part 1

EE292: Fundamentals of ECE

ECE Spring 2015 Final Exam

Exercise 1: Capacitors

Chapter 15 Power And Harmonics in Nonsinusoidal Systems

Circuit Analysis-II. Circuit Analysis-II Lecture # 5 Monday 23 rd April, 18

SECOND ENGINEER REG III/2 MARINE ELECTRO-TECHNOLOGY. 1. Understands the physical construction and characteristics of basic components.

Ch. 23 Electromagnetic Induction, AC Circuits, And Electrical Technologies

EDEXCEL NATIONALS UNIT 5 - ELECTRICAL AND ELECTRONIC PRINCIPLES. ASSIGNMENT No. 3 - ELECTRO MAGNETIC INDUCTION

Electrical Engineering Fundamentals for Non-Electrical Engineers

Assessment Schedule 2015 Physics: Demonstrate understanding of electrical systems (91526)

AC Source and RLC Circuits

DOWNLOAD PDF AC CIRCUIT ANALYSIS PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS

Electrical Circuit & Network

Chapter 1W Basic Electromagnetic Concepts

Figure 5.2 Instantaneous Power, Voltage & Current in a Resistor

Module 4. Single-phase AC circuits. Version 2 EE IIT, Kharagpur

Power System Analysis Prof. A. K. Sinha Department of Electrical Engineering Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur

Chapter 10 AC Analysis Using Phasors

BASIC PRINCIPLES. Power In Single-Phase AC Circuit

What happens when things change. Transient current and voltage relationships in a simple resistive circuit.

Exam 3 Solutions. The induced EMF (magnitude) is given by Faraday s Law d dt dt The current is given by

Review of Basic Electrical and Magnetic Circuit Concepts EE

Introduction to Synchronous. Machines. Kevin Gaughan

Single Phase Parallel AC Circuits

Power Systems - Basic Concepts and Applications - Part I

Induction_P1. 1. [1 mark]

C R. Consider from point of view of energy! Consider the RC and LC series circuits shown:

fiziks Institute for NET/JRF, GATE, IIT-JAM, JEST, TIFR and GRE in PHYSICAL SCIENCES

Sinusoidal Steady-State Analysis

Sinusoidal Steady State Analysis (AC Analysis) Part II

CHAPTER 22 ELECTROMAGNETIC INDUCTION

Chapter 32A AC Circuits. A PowerPoint Presentation by Paul E. Tippens, Professor of Physics Southern Polytechnic State University

12 Chapter Driven RLC Circuits

True Power vs. Apparent Power: Understanding the Difference Nicholas Piotrowski, Associated Power Technologies

The process of analysing a circuit using the Laplace technique can be broken down into a series of straightforward steps:

Transcription:

PHASOR DIAGRAMS HANDS-ON RELAY SCHOOL WSU PULLMAN, WA. RON ALEXANDER - BPA

What are phasors??? In normal practice, the phasor represents the rms maximum value of the positive half cycle of the sinusoid unless otherwise specifically stated. Phasors, unless otherwise specified, are used only within the context of steady state alternating linear systems (system that are steadily running at one frequency, and all phasors plotted are of that same frequency). The term phasor can also be applied to impedance, and related complex quantities that are not time dependent. While represented as phasors, the impedance and power phasors do not rotate at system frequency. The international standard is that phasors always rotate in the counterclockwise direction. However, as a convenience, on the diagrams the phasor is always shown fixed for the given condition. Phasor diagrams require a circuit diagram. The phasor diagram has a indeterminate or vague meaning unless it is accompanied by a circuit diagram. The assumed directions and polarities are not critical, as the phasor diagram will confirm if the assumptions were correct, and provide the correct magnitudes and phase relations.

HOW WE PLOT PHASORS CARTESIAN COORDINATE SYSTEM

Phasors are an efficient method of analyzing AC circuits when the frequencies are the same (the amplitudes do not need to be). Let s look at an example of a sine wave represented as a phasor: In the phasor diagram, everything is plotted on a coordinate system. Phasors are defined relative to the reference phasor which is always chosen to point to the right. Here we have chosen the blue voltage phasor as our reference. The two voltages have the same amplitude. Therefore the arrow of the red phasor has the same length as the reference phasor. The red voltage leads the blue voltage by 30.

You can also add vectors graphically as shown below to represent new values such as phase to phase voltages.

Q: When voltages and currents of an AC power system (of same frequency) are plotted on a coordinate system, why do the currents so often differ in angle from the referenced voltage?

Phasor Diagrams It is sometimes helpful to treat the phase as if it defined a vector in a plane. The usual reference for zero phase is taken to be the positive x-axis and is associated with the resistor, or resistive part of an AC power system, since the voltage and current associated with the resistor are in phase. The length of the phasor is proportional to the magnitude of the quantity represented, and its angle represents its phase relative to that of the current through the resistor. The phasor diagram for the RLC series circuit shows the main features. Q: How would you plot Z (impedance) if V is 100V at 0º, I is 10A at 330º

Resistor AC Response Impedance Phasor diagram

Capacitor AC Response Impedance Phasor diagram You know that the voltage across a capacitor lags the current (ICE) because the current must flow to build up the charge, and the voltage is proportional to that charge which is built up on the capacitor plates.

Inductor AC Response Impedance Phasor diagram You know that the voltage across an inductor leads the current (ELI) because the Lenz' law behavior resists the buildup of the current, and it takes a finite time for an imposed voltage to force the buildup of current to its maximum.

PURPOSE OF PHASORS Tool for understanding the power system during load and fault conditions. Assists a person in understanding principles of relay operation for testing and analysis of relay operations. Allows technicians to develop faults that can be used to test relays. Provides easier analysis of V and I during all system conditions. Common language of power protection engineers and technicians. Another method of performing mathematical operations of AC quantities (sum currents, voltages, impedance). This allows a person to see the quantities graphically rather than always doing it mathematically. In the relay world, separates a data-entry person from a real power system craftsman.

Voltage phasors Current phasors Phasor representation of pure inductance Phasor representation of pure capacitance Phasor representation of Z (impedance) LET S DRAW Phasors under faults (keep in mind, faults are inductive) Phasors to help see the difference between power in/out, vars in/out Phasors that help us see the phase shift across a transformer

LET S LOOK AT HOW PHASORS ARE DRAWN WHEN ANALYZING FAULTS

FAULT ARE INDUCTIVE! (current lags respective voltage)

Good example of a single phase fault, our most common type of faults! Question: why are Ib and Ic 180º out of phase with their respective voltage?

Example of a real 3 phase fault on a 500kV line. Can you see the DC offset or know why it exists???

Let s try placing phasor representations of the quantities seen from this 3 phase fault. Draw them in on the coordinate system below:

Here is an example of one of the most difficult faults to understand, a phase to phase fault that does not involve ground. What happens during a phase to phase fault? What happens to the current? How would this be different if it did involve ground???

Let s see if we can plot this fault ourselves from what we have learned so far!

Now, let s try plotting phasors to show graphically the phase displacement (shift) across a delta-wye transformer.

PHASE DISPLACEMENT AS SHOWN BY PHASORS ACROSS A WYE-DELTA TRANSFORMER If you had to do this from a transformer nameplate, you generally only see the bushing designations and it s polarity (additive or subtractive).

Resultant is that the X winding of the transformer is lagging 30 from high side.

Q: WHY IS THE SKILLFUL USE OF PHASORS IMPORTANT TO YOU? For any technician or engineer to understand the characteristics of a power system, the use of phasors and polarity are essential. They aid in the understanding and analysis of how the power system is connected and operates both during normal (balanced) conditions, as well as fault (unbalanced) conditions. Thus, as J. Lewis Blackburn of Westinghouse stated, a sound theoretical and practical knowledge of phasors and polarity is a fundamental and valuable resource.