Notes
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Outline
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Chapter 24
  • Three-Phase Systems
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Three-Phase Voltage Generation
  • Three-phase generators
    • Three sets of windings and produce three ac voltages
  • Windings are placed 120° apart
    • Voltages are three identical sinusoidal voltages 120° apart
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Three-Phase Voltage Generation
  • Set of voltages such as these are balanced
  • If you know one of the voltages
    • The other two are easily determined
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Four-Wire Systems
  • Three loads have common return wire called neutral
  • If load is balanced
    • Current in the neutral is zero
  • Current is small
    • Wire can be smaller or removed
    • Current may not be zero, but it is very small
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Four-Wire Systems
  • Outgoing lines are called line or phase conductors
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Three-Phase Relationships
  • Line voltages
    • Voltages between lines either at the generator (EAB) or at the load (VAB)
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Three-Phase Relationships
  • Phase voltages
    • Voltages across phases
      • For a Y load, phases are from line to neutral
      • For D load, the phases are from line to line
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Three-Phase Relationships
  • Line currents
    • Currents in line conductors
  • Phase currents
    • Currents through phases
    • For a Y load two currents are the same
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Voltages in a Wye Circuit
  • For a balanced Y system
    • Magnitude of line-to-line voltage is        times the magnitude of phase voltage
  • Each line-to-line voltage
    • Leads corresponding phase voltage by 30°
  • Line-to-line voltages form a balanced set
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Voltages for a Wye Circuit
  • Nominal voltages
    • 120/208-V
    • 277/480-V
    • 347/600-V systems
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Voltages for a Wye Circuit
  • Given any voltage at a point in a balanced, three-phase Y system
    • Determine remaining five voltages using the formulas
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Currents for a Wye Circuit
  • Line currents
    • Same as phase currents
    • Ia = Van/Zan
  • Line currents form a balanced set
    • If you know one current
      • Determine the other five currents by inspection
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Currents for a Delta Load
  • In a balanced delta
    • The magnitude of the line current is     times the magnitude of the phase current
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Currents for a Delta Load
  • Each line current lags its corresponding phase current by 30°
  • For any current in a balanced, three-phase delta load
    • Determine remaining currents by inspection

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Power in a Balanced System
  • To find total power in a balanced system
    • Determine power in one phase
    • Multiply by three
  • Use ac power formulas previously developed
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Power in a Balanced System
  • Since magnitudes are the same for all three phases, simplified notation may be used
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Active Power to a Balanced Wye Load
  • Pf = VfIf cos qf
  • PT = 3Pf = 3VfIf cos qf
  • PT =     VLIL cos qf
  • Pf = If2Rf
  • PT = 3If2Rf
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Reactive Power to a Balanced Wye Load
  • Qf = VfIf sin qf
  • QT =     VLIL sin qf
  • Qf = If2Xf
  • Units are VARs
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Apparent Power to a Balanced Wye Load
  • Sf = VfIf
  • ST =     VLIL
  • Sf = If2Zf


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Apparent Power to a Balanced Wye Load
  • Units are VAs
  • Power factor is
  • Fp = cos qf = PT/ST = Pf/Sf


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Power to a Balanced Delta Load
  • Power formulas for D load are identical to those for Y load
  • In all these formulas
    • Angle qf is phase angle of the load impedance
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Power to a Balanced Delta Load
  • You can also use single-phase equivalent in power calculations
    • Power will be power for just one phase
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Measuring Power in Three-Phase Circuits
  • Measuring power to a 4-wire Y load requires three wattmeters (one meter per phase)
  • Loads may be balanced or unbalanced
  • Total power is sum of individual powers
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Measuring Power in Three-Phase Circuits
  • If load could be guaranteed to be balanced
    • Only one meter would be required
    • Its value multiplied by 3
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Measuring Power in Three-Phase Circuits
  • For a three-wire system
    • Only two meters are needed
  • Loads may be Y or D
  • Loads may be balanced or unbalanced
  • Total power is algebraic sum of meter readings
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Measuring Power in Three-Phase Circuits
  • Power factor for a balanced load
    • Obtain from wattmeter readings using a watts ratio curve


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Measuring Power in Three-Phase Circuits
  • From this, q can be determined
  • Power factor can then be determined from cos q
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Unbalanced Loads
  • Use Ohm’s law
    • For unbalanced four-wire Y systems without line impedance
  • Three-wire and four-wire systems with line and neutral impedance
    • Require use of mesh analysis
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Unbalanced Loads
  • One of the problems with unbalanced loads
    • Different voltages are obtained across each phase of the load and between neutral points
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Unbalanced Loads
  • Unbalanced four-wire D systems without line impedance are easily handled
    • Source voltage is applied directly to load
  • Three-wire and four-wire systems with line and neutral impedance
    • Require use of mesh analysis
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Power System Loads
  • Single-phase power
    • Residential and business customers
  • Single-phase and three-phase systems
    • Industrial customers
    • Therefore, there is a need to connect both single-phase and three-phase loads to three-phase systems
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Power System Loads
  • Utility tries to connect one third of its single-phase loads to each phase
  • Three-phase loads are generally balanced
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Power System Loads
  • Real loads
    • Seldom expressed in terms of resistance, capacitance, and inductance
    • Rather, real loads are described in terms of power, power factors, etc.