Active Currents, Power Factor, and Apparent Power for Practical Power Delivery Systems

Concepts of apparent power and power factor as measures of a system's power delivery capability are over a century old but have not been defined in one general, rigorous and acceptable way. Instantaneous power is defined precisely, and average power measured over a selected period is widely acc...

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Main Authors: Michel Malengret, C. Trevor Gaunt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2020-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9144596/
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spelling doaj-8971c1e86db24817b6e3d7be7493bd852021-03-30T04:42:41ZengIEEEIEEE Access2169-35362020-01-01813309513311310.1109/ACCESS.2020.30106389144596Active Currents, Power Factor, and Apparent Power for Practical Power Delivery SystemsMichel Malengret0C. Trevor Gaunt1https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7518-0446MLT Drives, Cape Town, South AfricaDepartment of Electrical Engineering, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South AfricaConcepts of apparent power and power factor as measures of a system's power delivery capability are over a century old but have not been defined in one general, rigorous and acceptable way. Instantaneous power is defined precisely, and average power measured over a selected period is widely accepted. The many ways of defining and measuring reactive and apparent power in single and three phase systems are based on different assumptions and give different results in real cases. Building on definitions in the IEEE Standard 1459-2010, this paper formulates in vector space linear algebra and the frequency domain, the active wire currents as those that cause the minimum losses in a network for the power delivered. Power factor measures the relative efficiency of power delivery as defined by the losses. Apparent power consistent with early terminology is the maximum power that can be sourced for the same original line losses and has the unit of power: Watt. It is identified without requiring the contentious concept of reactive and non-active power components. Measurements based on this approach are independent of assumptions about sinusoidal waveform, voltage and current balance, and frequency-dependent wire resistances, and apply to power delivery systems with any number of wires. The rigor of this novel general formulation is important for technical design of compensators and inverters; analyzing power system losses, delivery efficiency and voltage stability; and electricity cost allocation and pricing.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9144596/Active currentapparent powerharmonicspower theoryrepresentational measurementunbalance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michel Malengret
C. Trevor Gaunt
spellingShingle Michel Malengret
C. Trevor Gaunt
Active Currents, Power Factor, and Apparent Power for Practical Power Delivery Systems
IEEE Access
Active current
apparent power
harmonics
power theory
representational measurement
unbalance
author_facet Michel Malengret
C. Trevor Gaunt
author_sort Michel Malengret
title Active Currents, Power Factor, and Apparent Power for Practical Power Delivery Systems
title_short Active Currents, Power Factor, and Apparent Power for Practical Power Delivery Systems
title_full Active Currents, Power Factor, and Apparent Power for Practical Power Delivery Systems
title_fullStr Active Currents, Power Factor, and Apparent Power for Practical Power Delivery Systems
title_full_unstemmed Active Currents, Power Factor, and Apparent Power for Practical Power Delivery Systems
title_sort active currents, power factor, and apparent power for practical power delivery systems
publisher IEEE
series IEEE Access
issn 2169-3536
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Concepts of apparent power and power factor as measures of a system's power delivery capability are over a century old but have not been defined in one general, rigorous and acceptable way. Instantaneous power is defined precisely, and average power measured over a selected period is widely accepted. The many ways of defining and measuring reactive and apparent power in single and three phase systems are based on different assumptions and give different results in real cases. Building on definitions in the IEEE Standard 1459-2010, this paper formulates in vector space linear algebra and the frequency domain, the active wire currents as those that cause the minimum losses in a network for the power delivered. Power factor measures the relative efficiency of power delivery as defined by the losses. Apparent power consistent with early terminology is the maximum power that can be sourced for the same original line losses and has the unit of power: Watt. It is identified without requiring the contentious concept of reactive and non-active power components. Measurements based on this approach are independent of assumptions about sinusoidal waveform, voltage and current balance, and frequency-dependent wire resistances, and apply to power delivery systems with any number of wires. The rigor of this novel general formulation is important for technical design of compensators and inverters; analyzing power system losses, delivery efficiency and voltage stability; and electricity cost allocation and pricing.
topic Active current
apparent power
harmonics
power theory
representational measurement
unbalance
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9144596/
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