Measurement Uncertainty of Harmonic Emission Indicators based on IEEE Std. 1459-2010 | IEEE Conference Publication | IEEE Xplore

Measurement Uncertainty of Harmonic Emission Indicators based on IEEE Std. 1459-2010


Abstract:

The study presented in this paper is aimed at analyzing the measurement uncertainty impact on the evaluation of some power ratio parameters for harmonic emissions assessm...Show More

Abstract:

The study presented in this paper is aimed at analyzing the measurement uncertainty impact on the evaluation of some power ratio parameters for harmonic emissions assessment based on IEEE Std. 1459-2010 apparent power decomposition. In addition to power factors for line utilization and harmonic pollution levels evaluation defined in the Standard, the study covers also some new parameters, which have been introduced by the authors as IEEE Std. 1459-2010 power quantities ratios. The measurement of the aforesaid parameters is implemented on a PC-based wattmeter, in order to investigate the measurement uncertainty impact on the evaluation of the power ratios. The obtained results show that, in comparison with IEEE Std. 1459-2010 indicator for harmonic pollution level, better results can be reached with the new power ratios, whose behavior is more similar to the traditional power factors.
Date of Conference: 25-28 May 2020
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 30 June 2020
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Conference Location: Dubrovnik, Croatia

I. Introduction

With the increase of harmonic distortion in modern distribution networks, due to the widespread diffusion of power electronics devices, the problem of harmonic emissions assessment and mitigation has become a very important issue [1]. To promote regulation strategies and incentives for harmonic mitigation and billing systems for sharing responsibility between customers and utilities for harmonic disturbances, it is necessary to have simple tools for evaluating harmonic pollution levels at the point of common coupling (PCC) as well as on the whole grid. The issue has been largely debated in scientific literature [2]–[12]. Sophisticated methods have been formulated to separate customers and utilities contribution to harmonic distortion, and to investigate the impact of single harmonic components. However, such methods are difficult to be implemented in practical measurement equipment used for billing purposes (i.e. the common smart metering platforms currently used in distribution networks, which have limited memory). On the contrary, simpler methods have been proposed, which allow indicating the prevailing source of disturbance upstream or downstream the PCC or the presence of a disturbing load.

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