Tutorial1 Solution
Tutorial1 Solution
1. The electrical installation of an industrial site is supplied by three-phase 415V with the
following loads:
100 60W lighting points
20 50W exhaust fans (permanently connected)
80 10A 1-phase single socket outlets
10 15A 1-phase socket outlets S P jQ P 2 Q 2
1 5.5kW/10A 3-phase rolling machine motor S
2 4kW/8A 3-phase lathe motors P 3VLL I L cos S
1 4.8kW 1-phase storage water heater S 3VLL I L
Refer to the appropriate Australian Standard(s):
i. Specify the load group for each type of load listed above.
ii. Describe one arrangement for load connection across the three-phase supply. It is required
to spread the load evenly among the three phases.
iii. Determine the maximum demand of the heaviest loaded phase.
Solutions:
Factory → refer to column 3 of Table C2 (AS/NZS3000:2007). Phase voltage is 240V.
60
100X60W lights (load group A): I 100 25A(1- ) [full connected load]
240
50
20X50W exhaust fans (load group A): I 20 4.17A (1- )
240
4.8kW water heater (load group G): I 4800 / 240 20A (1- ) [full-load current]
1
10 x 15A sockets (load group B(iii)): I 15 0.75 15 9 116.25A
1000 79 750 1000 44 750
80 x 10A sockets (load group B(i)): I 251.04A 141.7A
240 240
1 x 5.5kW/10A 3- rolling machine (group D): I=10A in each phase
35 750
109.4A
1 x 4kW/8A 3- lathe (group D): I=100%X8=8A in each phase 240
1 x 4kW/8A 3- lathe (group D): I=0.75X8=6A in each phase
0.2 j 0.1 C
0.2 j 0.1 C
40A at unity pf
40A at unity pf =40+j0
I DA I CD 40 j 0 I 117 j 46
Voltage drop around the ring main: 0.3 j 0.1 I 0.4 j 0.2 I 32 j 24
0.2 j 0.1 I 77 j 46 0.2 j 0.1 I 117 j 46 0
Obviously, C has the lowest voltage, and the drop below A is:
5
4. For the circuit shown below, it may be assumed that the circuit is one phase of a balanced 3-
phase distribution system. The total load is 20 kW at 0.9 leading power factor (at the load). The
source end voltage VS(LL) is 424 V and the total line impedance per phase is (0.5+j0.7) ohms.
Determine the voltage at the load. Hence determine the line voltage drop. Is the line drop
within the limits of ±6%? Do the calculation using:
(a) an accurate method to determine the full voltage phasor;
(b) an approximate method to get the load voltage magnitude only.
+ R X I +
VS load VR
_ _
cos
Solutions:
(a) Accurate method to calculate voltage drop:
Phase quantities:
* Phase voltage (at source): VS 424 3 244.8V
7407
25.84o 0.8654.46o VR
6370
244.8 o VR 80.3o
VR VR
Equate real and imaginary parts:
6370 6370
244.8cos VR cos80.3o 244.8sin sin80.3o
VR VR
2 2
6370 6370
Thus: 244.82 VR cos80.3o sin80.3o
VR VR
VR 238.9V and VR 26.67V. Discard the low value (unrealistic).
I I I cos j sin Z R jX
4
6
VS VR IR cos IX sin j IR sin IX cos 5
2 3
1: IRcos; 5: IRsin
VS VR IR cos IX sin IR sin IX cos
2 2
3: IXsin; 4: IXcos 1
2: 1-3=IRcos - IXsin; 6: 5+4=IRsin + IXcos
Approximate solution by just using the real part:
VS VR IR cos IX sin (1) VS VR IR cos IX sin (2) 25.84 o
From (1):
7407 7407
244.8 VR 0.5 0.9 0.7 0.436 VR2 244.8VR 1073 0
VR VR
Solve: VR 240.34 V and VR 4.46 V
Discard the low value (unrealistic). Hence, voltage drop is:
VS VR 244.8 240.34 4.46 V
4.46
i.e. % voltage drop 100% 1.82% (Exact: 2.4%)
244.8
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5. The approximate equation ∆V=IRcos + IXsin can be used to calculate the regulation of a
transformer when supplying a load which is operating at a power factor of cos, where is
positive for lagging power factor and negative for leading power factor. Using the above
equation, determine the conditions, in terms of the relation of to R and X, which will give:
(a) maximum voltage drop (regulation) in the transformer at a fixed load current level
(b) zero voltage drop (regulation) in the transformer V IR cos IX sin
Neglect any other impedance between the source and the load. =IR cos( ) IX sin( ) 0
In case (b), you should find that the required conditions correspond to a leading power factor at
the load. Plot a detailed graph showing how the transformer voltage drop varies with the
leading power factor value.
Solutions:
(a) Maximum voltage drop
As V V S V R IR cos IX sin
d V X X
IR sin IX cos 0 tan
-1
sin
First-order derivative: R2 X 2
d R
R
d 2 V cos
Second-order derivative: IR cos IX sin = I R 2 X 2 0 R2 X 2
d 2
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Hence ∆V is maximum when tan -1 and V I
X
R2 X 2 I | Z |
R max
• Maximum voltage drop with a fixed load current but variable load power factor
Vmax VS VR max
| I | | Z || I | R 2 X 2
It occurs when load power factor angle tan -1 X / R Z , lagging.
VR VS
Under such condition
tan 1 ( X / R)
V S V R VS VR IR cos IX sin . I jX
I I R
V S V R I Z V R I Z Z V R I Z Z
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Example: R=0.1Ω, X=0.15 Ω, I=100A, VR=230V ( R jX ) / 2
I
Z Load
V VS VR V S V R I Z , V R VR 0 2300
0 0
VS Z Load Z
VR Load
V IR cos IX sin I 100 (A) ( R jX ) / 2
V S V R
Normally load is inductive. One can see that difference between exact solution and approximate
solution for inductive loads is very small.
The maximum voltage drop Vmax VS VR max
|I | | Z || I | R 2 X 2 V S V R
It occurs only when load power factor cos tan -1 X / R 0.555, lagging. tan X / R
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6. Show that the approximate voltage drop equation:
V V S V R IR cos IX sin
for the drop in an impedance Z=R+jX between a source and a load can also be written as:
RP XQ RP XQ
V
V V
where V is the load voltage magnitude and P is the load real power in watts and Q is the load
reactive power in VARs.
Solutions:
Approximate voltage drop: V V S V R IR cos IX sin
where V is the load voltage magnitude, P is the load real power, and Q is the load reactive
power. Hence:
RP XQ
V
V
13
7. The single-line diagram of an unloaded three-phase power system is
shown below. The component ratings are as follows.
Generator G1: 20MVA, 13.8kV, X=0.2pu
Generator G2: 30MVA, 18kV, X=0.2pu
Transformer T1: 25MVA, 220Y/13.8Δ kV, X=10%
Transformer T2: 30MVA, 220Y/18 Δ kV, X=10%
Line L1: j80Ω per phase
Draw the per unit impedance diagram using 50MVA, 13.8kV bases in the
circuit of generator G1. Clearly mark all impedance values on the diagram.
A B C D
T1 T2
L1
G1 G2
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Per-unit system
Per-unit values for both three phase and single phase
V pu V / Vb V is in real unit whereas Vb is the voltage base.
I pu I / I b I is in real unit whereas Ib is the current base.
S pu S / Sb Ppu P / Sb Q pu Q / Sb Each of S, P and Q is in real unit whereas Sb is the
power base.
Z pu Z / Z b Z is in real unit whereas Zb is the impedance base.
Formulas for single phase Formulas for three phase
S Vb Vb2 S Vb / 3 Vb2
Ib b Zb Ib b Zb
Vb I b Sb 3Vb Ib Sb
Conversions from old per-unit value to new per-unit value for impedance (valid for both single
phase and three phase)
Z pu ,old Z b,old Z pu ,old Vb2,old / Sb ,old Vb2,old Sb ,new
Z pu ,new Z pu ,old 2
Z b,new Vb2,new / Sb ,new Vb ,new Sb ,old
For a three-phase power system, the default voltage base is a line-line one which is for a wye-
connection or equivalent wye connection if original connection is in delta form. The per-unit line
voltage value is equal to per-unit phase voltage used in one-phase equivalent circuit for the Y-
connected or equivalent Y-connected three-phase system.
V phase 3V phase Vlineline
V pu , phase V pu ,lineline
Vb, phase 3Vb, phase Vb ,lineline
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For a power system with transformers, the power base is the same on two sides of a
transformer and there is only one power base for the whole system whereas the current,
voltage and impedance bases are different on two sides. Their relationships are as follows:
Vb,side1 Vrating ,side1
(valid for both single phase and three phase. For the three phase
Vb,side 2 Vrating ,side 2 system, voltages are the line-line ones)
Sb 3Vb,side1 I b,side1 3Vb,side 2 I b,side 2 (for three phase system; the voltages
are the line-line bases)
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Solution:
0.2 (13.8kV)2 / 20MVA
Sb 50MVA Vb,G1 13.8kV X G1 puNEW 0.5pu
(13.8kV)2 / 50MVA
Vb,C 220kV 220kV/18kV
(T1 Trans. ratio) Vb ,C 220kV
Vb,G1 13.8kV A B C D
T1 T2
L1
Vb,C 220 G1 G2
Vb,D 18.0kV
Vb,D 18
17
p.u. per-phase circuit diagram:
A B C D
E G1 E G2
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