4 Power Quality Monitoring
4 Power Quality Monitoring
4 Power Quality Monitoring
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1 MONITORING CONSIDERATIONS
The monitoring objectives often determine the choice of monitoring equipment,
triggering thresholds, methods for data acquisition and storage, and analysis
and interpretation requirements.
The initial site survey should be designed to obtain as much information as possible
about the customer facility.
This information is especially important when the monitoring objective is intended to
address specific power quality problems.
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Figure .2 Form for recording feeder circuit test data (from panel)
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Figure .3 Form for recording branch circuit test data (from panel)
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Figure .4 Form for recording test data at individual loads.
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1.2 Choosing monitoring locations
However, such monitoring may be too expensive and there are challenges in
data management, analysis, and interpretation.
Data collected at the service entrance can also characterize the customer load
current variations and harmonic distortion levels.
Monitoring at customer service entrance locations has the additional
advantage of reduced transducer costs.
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1.3 Options for permanent power quality monitoring equipment
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Figure : Illustration of system power quality monitoring concept with
monitoring at the substation and selected customer locations.
1.Digital fault recorders (DFRs):
These may already be in place at many substations.
DFR manufacturers do not design the devices specifically for power quality
monitoring.
However, a DFR will typically trigger on fault events and record the voltage
and current waveforms that characterize the event.
This makes them valuable for characterizing rms disturbances, such as
voltage sags, during power system faults.
3.Voltage recorders.:
Power providers use a variety of voltage recorders to monitor steady-state
voltage variations on distribution systems.
Typically, the voltage recorder provides a trend that gives the maximum,
minimum, and average voltage within specified sampling window
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2. Power Quality Measurement Equipment
They include everything from very fast transient overvoltages (microsecond
time frame) to long-duration outages (hours or days time frame).
Power quality problems also include steady-state phenomena, such as
harmonic distortion, and intermittent phenomena, such as voltage flicker.
Solving any diagnostic problem requires the right tools and the ability to use
them.
Power quality engineers and technicians need meters and other measurement
tools to solve electrical problems.
The first step in solving a power quality problem is to determine the cause of
the problem.
Making either visual inspections or electrical measurements of the electrical
distribution system can do this.
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Figure: Measurement tools.
They include instruments that measure and display the basic electrical
parameters of voltage, current, frequency, and impedance of an electrical
distribution system.
These tools include ammeters, voltmeters, multimeters, oscilloscopes, flicker
meters, electrostatic voltmeters, infrared detectors, radio-frequency
interference and electromagnetic interference meters, harmonic and spectrum
analyzers, power quality monitors, and various types of wiring and grounding
testers.
These instruments measure, display, and store electrical parameters for the
purpose of helping solve power quality problems.
In addition to these electrical measurement tools, there are devices, such as
video cameras and audiotape recorders, for recording the effects of power
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quality problems.
With all these choices, power quality experts as well as beginners must know
how to choose and use the right instrument.
how to choose the right measurement tool is a three-step process.
(i) First requires knowing the various types of power quality problems
discussed They include voltage swells, voltage sags, various types of
interruptions, overvoltage, undervoltage, harmonics, and transients.
(ii) Secondly, it requires knowing the various types of instruments to measure
those disturbances. The three primary types of instruments are multimeters,
oscilloscopes, and analyzers especially designed to measure and record power
quality disturbances.
(iii) Thirdly, it requires knowing how to match the instrument to the power
quality problem, as shown in Table .
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2.1 Types of instruments
Basic categories of instruments that may be applicable include
1. Wiring and grounding test devices
2. Multimeters
3. Oscilloscopes
4. Disturbance analyzers
5. Harmonic analyzers and spectrum analyzers
6. Combination disturbance and harmonic analyzers
7. Flicker meters
8. Energy monitors
Regardless of the type of instrumentation needed for a particular test, there are a number
of important factors that should be considered
when selecting the instrument. Some of the more important factors include
Number of channels (voltage and/or current)
Temperature specifications of the instrument
Ruggedness of the instrument
Input voltage range (e.g., 0 to 600 V)
Power requirements
Ability to measure three-phase voltages
Input isolation (isolation between input channels and from each input to ground)
Ability to measure currents
Housing of the instrument (portable, rack-mount, etc.)
Ease of use (user interface, graphics capability, etc.)
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Communication capability (modem, network interface)
Analysis software
Wiring and grounding testers
Many power quality problems reported by end users are caused by problems
with wiring and/or grounding within the facility.
These problems can be identified by visual inspection of wiring, connections,
and panel boxes and also with special test devices for detecting wiring and
grounding problems.
Three-phase wiring testers should also test for phase rotation and phase-to-
phase voltages.
These test devices can be quite simple and provide an excellent initial test for
circuit integrity.
Many problems can be detected without the requirement for detailed
monitoring using expensive instrumentation.
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Multimeters
After initial tests of wiring integrity, it may also be necessary to make quick
checks of the voltage and/or current levels within a facility.
Overloading of circuits, undervoltage and overvoltage problems, and unbalances
between circuits can be detected in this manner.
These measurements just require a simple multimeter.
Signals used to check for these include
■ Phase-to-ground voltages
■ Phase-to-neutral voltages
■ Neutral-to-ground voltages
■ Phase-to-phase voltages (three-phase system)
■ Phase currents
■ Neutral currents
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Oscilloscopes
Disturbance analyzers
They typically can measure a wide variety of system disturbances from very
short duration transient voltages to long-duration outages or undervoltages.
Thresholds can be set and the instruments left unattended to record
disturbances over a period of time. The information is most commonly recorded
on a paper tape, but many devices have attachments so that it can be recorded
on disk as well.
There are basically two categories of these devices:
Transducer requirements
Monitoring of power quality on power systems often requires transducers to obtain
acceptable voltage and current signal levels.
Voltage transducers.
Current transducers. turns ratio, e.g., 2000:5
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