Neutral Current
Neutral Current
Neutral Current
Crompton Instruments
1610 Cobb International Parkway, Unit #4
Kennesaw, GA 30152
Tel. 770-425-8903
Fax. 770-423-7194
Within most businesses is the most typical type of building distribution wiring - a three-phase wye
system. Nearly all small commercial or industrial facilities that have three-phase power will have a
wye system.
With a wye system comes the expectation that if the three-phases have about the same amount
of current in them, then the neutral will have very little current. Or, to put it another way, the more
the system is balanced, the less current is in the neutral. If high currents are measured in the
neutral, or at least higher than we expect, problems may result. This segment focuses on this
concern.
Current in a facility or business is dependent on the loads inside. Therefore, there are no
significant influencing factors from neighbors or the utility that affect how much current winds up
in a panel or a neutral.
The second situation involves current harmonic distortion. This is where the terms "unexplained"
and "excessive" come into play, since harmonic distortion changes the rules we are used to
playing by.
In today's environment, it is becoming increasingly likely that high neutral currents result from
some combination of the two.
Unbalanced Loads
On a three-phase system where the dominant loads are single phase, the neutral carries the
unbalanced amount of current. Even though the loads may have been balanced at one time, the
normal changing of the system may have caused a large unbalance, leading to a large neutral
current.
Many times, when sizing loads and distributing them within a panel, only the full load current is
considered, not how often that load is on or off. So, at any given time there may be significant
unbalance due to loads being on or off.
Whether because of load shifts and changes, or due to the diversity of loads being on or off at the
same time, neutral current from unbalance may become high, but is seldom excessive. Problems
happen when the neutral wire has been undersized and high currents still occur -- possibly
leading to a burnt neutral. Quite often this is aided by illegal wiring practices.
High neutral currents from unbalance are fairly easy to resolve. Loads need to be powered from
appropriate phase to ensure balancing, so relocate or rewire particular loads to bring balance
about.
If diversity is the problem, then use a power flow monitor such as the BMI PowerProfiler to
determine the current swings of loads and when the shifts occur. Then rewire or relocate to bring
in a better balance.
In both cases, keep the neutral conductor at lease the same size as the phase conductors. For
those who really want to think ahead, make the neutral one size larger. This will help deal with the
concern over harmonics.
This has led to a number of commonly held beliefs that are now jeopardized by harmonics. Two
are important for this discussion.
The first belief is that to find out the amount of current or voltage in the system, simply get a
cheap voltmeter or ammeter. If we are concerned about "excessive" currents, we must measure
to find out how much current there is.
The second belief, mentioned earlier, states that a fairly balanced panel will have little neutral
current.
Current harmonic distortion changes both of these beliefs.
First, the actual technology used in most hand-held meters today assumes the signal being
measured is sinusoidal. The meter reads the average value of the signal, assumes it is a sine
wave, and adjusts it to display the value in RMS. This is known as an average detecting, RMS-
calibrated meter, and is by far the most common type of meter used today.
However, when harmonics are present, the adjustment used by these meters is wrong. The
actual measurements may be as much as 50% in error. Because of this, harmonically distorted
signals must be measured with a true-RMS meter. These meters cost more, but they give
accurate readings.
The second belief, that of there being no neutral current in a perfectly balanced panel, is based
on the fact that three identical sine waves, each 120 electrical degrees apart from each other, will
offset, or cancel out. Thus, three balanced loads should have little to no neutral current.
However, when harmonics are present we don't have sine waves, at least not solely at 60 Hz.
The distorted waveform can be broken down into a set of sine waves. The basic component,
called the fundamental, is a sine wave at 60 Hz. The second harmonic is a sine wave at 120 Hz.
The third is a sine wave at 180 Hz, etc.
When distorted currents share a common neutral, most of these higher frequency sine waves
cancel out just like what we expect from the 60 Hz sine waves. However, some harmonics don't
cancel. In fact, they add in the neutral. These harmonics are called zero sequence harmonics,
and they are the reason that high neutral currents exist, even though the loads may be perfectly
balanced.
Currents as high as 200% of the phase conductors have been seen in the field. This large level of
current can easily burn up the neutral creating an open neutral environment with very serious
consequences.
If high neutral current due to distorted current is the culprit, then the first step to take is eliminate
shared neutrals wherever possible. This mainly refers to branch circuits. Where this can't be
done, such as on a three-phase wye panel, try oversizing the neutral wire so it won't overheat.
If these efforts don't work, then the next step is to reduce the distortion. This can be done through
three methods. First, a passive filter can be used to reduce the current from one or two specific
harmonics.
An active filter, the second method, reduces all the harmonic currents. It is more costly and
complex to use, but it works better than passive filters.
The third method involves the use of transformers. Delta-wye transformers reduce certain
harmonics, particularly zero sequence harmonics. Zigzag transformers can also be used to
reduce zero sequence harmonics, but without changing the system type between delta and wye.