Marke
Electrical
- Oct 20, 2001
- 1,212
I am working with a customer who has experienced premature PFC capacitor failure in a pumping installation.
My customer has a number of large pumps operating off dedicated transformers and an 11KV feeder.
The supply authority are insisting on power factor correction, and the motors are controlled by soft starters.
Each motor has the correct amount of static power factor correction that is controlled by the soft starter via a capacitor rated contactor that is switched in once the motor is up to full speed.
The capacitors are not detuned and are only connected when the motors are operating at close to full load.
The capacitors lasted around three months. The capacitor cans bulged at the ends and the capacitors failed.
One theory is, that the capacitors, motors and supply are forming a high Q harmonic resonant circuit which is causing high currents to flow through the capacitors and this is causing the failure.
The other theory is that during the irrigation season, the harmonic voltage on the supply is seriously elevated and this is causing elevated harmonic currents to flow and overloading the capacitors.
The capacitor failure was during the peak of the irrigation season when I would expect a significant harmonic current load in the region due to VFD driven pumps. In another region of a similar nature, I have measured THDv of 12% - 16%.
Tests in the Off season, yield harmonic voltages on this network of 3.5% +/-. At this time, there were no VFD controlled pumps running.
While I have certainly seen many examples of harmonic supply resonance and also non harmonic supply resonance on lightly loaded supplies with long 11KV and 22KV lines supplying the transformer, my experience is that when the transformer loading and motor loading is significant, the Q is so low that there is no significant resonance present.
Has anyone experienced premature capacitor failure on a loaded circuit that can definitely be shown to be due to harmonic resonance?
At light loads this can definitely happen due to higher Q factors.
Best regards,
Mark.
Mark Empson
Advanced Motor Control Ltd
My customer has a number of large pumps operating off dedicated transformers and an 11KV feeder.
The supply authority are insisting on power factor correction, and the motors are controlled by soft starters.
Each motor has the correct amount of static power factor correction that is controlled by the soft starter via a capacitor rated contactor that is switched in once the motor is up to full speed.
The capacitors are not detuned and are only connected when the motors are operating at close to full load.
The capacitors lasted around three months. The capacitor cans bulged at the ends and the capacitors failed.
One theory is, that the capacitors, motors and supply are forming a high Q harmonic resonant circuit which is causing high currents to flow through the capacitors and this is causing the failure.
The other theory is that during the irrigation season, the harmonic voltage on the supply is seriously elevated and this is causing elevated harmonic currents to flow and overloading the capacitors.
The capacitor failure was during the peak of the irrigation season when I would expect a significant harmonic current load in the region due to VFD driven pumps. In another region of a similar nature, I have measured THDv of 12% - 16%.
Tests in the Off season, yield harmonic voltages on this network of 3.5% +/-. At this time, there were no VFD controlled pumps running.
While I have certainly seen many examples of harmonic supply resonance and also non harmonic supply resonance on lightly loaded supplies with long 11KV and 22KV lines supplying the transformer, my experience is that when the transformer loading and motor loading is significant, the Q is so low that there is no significant resonance present.
Has anyone experienced premature capacitor failure on a loaded circuit that can definitely be shown to be due to harmonic resonance?
At light loads this can definitely happen due to higher Q factors.
Best regards,
Mark.
Mark Empson
Advanced Motor Control Ltd