Page 412 - Handbook of Electrical Engineering
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15




           Harmonic Voltages and Currents









           15.1 INTRODUCTION

           It is generally understood that the voltages and currents in industrial power systems are sinusoidal
           quantities with a frequency of usually 50 Hz or 60 Hz. The design of these systems is based on an
           assumption that the voltages and currents are not distorted by harmonic components. In the majority
           of power systems this assumption is true and the effects of harmonics can be ignored.
                 However, occasions do arise when the design must take account of harmonics. Such consid-
           eration may be necessary at the beginning of a new project, or for a plant that already exists. In
           the first case the minimisation of the bad effects of harmonics is reasonably easy to accomplish.
           The second case for existing plants it is usually more difficult due to constraints that may not be
           removable or reducible.

           The main sources of harmonics in power systems are:-

           • Magnetic saturation in the stators and rotors of generators.
           • Geometry of the windings in the stators and rotors of generators.
           • Magnetic saturation in transformer cores.
           • Non-linear consumers such as battery chargers, uninterruptible power supplies, fluorescent light
             fittings.

           • Rectifiers and inverters for major consumers such as DC and AC motors.

                 The presence of harmonics caused by magnetic saturation and winding geometry of generators
           and transformers can be minimised from the outset by carefully specifying the design requirements
           of these equipments before they are purchased. Such specification may incur some small extra cost
           at the purchasing stage. For example if the operating flux density in these equipments is kept near
           to or below the knee-point of their saturation characteristics, then this will usually require a greater
           volume of iron in their magnetic circuits. This in turn will tend to make the equipment larger in its
           principal dimensions, and therefore more expensive.

                 The creation of harmonics by minor consumers can usually by minimised or eliminated by
           the use of shunt-connected capacitors, simple internal filters or smoothing circuits. This is again a
           matter of specification before purchasing the equipment.

           Handbook of Electrical Engineering: For Practitioners in the Oil, Gas and Petrochemical Industry.  Alan L. Sheldrake
            2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd ISBN: 0-471-49631-6
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