BokD
Electrical
- Sep 13, 2016
- 1
Let me preface this with the comment that 'I am not an electrical engineer', so apologise if this does not make much engineering sense or is a bit vague.
I have a mining client who operates a copper mine in the DRC. The associated SXEW consists of about 8MW of Electrowinning (rectification) and approx 2MW remaining is linear loads. The mining client had a consultant provide the design for the Harmonic Filters and the PFC. Typically I am used to seeing the harmonics and the PFC being dealt with separately (as they are completely different problems, but both solved using capacitance) but in this instance the consultant has stated that he has 'designed' a combined capacitor bank that he suggests deals with both harmonics and capacitance. According to the consultants calculations, harmonics problems are expected on the 5th and 12th harmonics and he has designed a 5.2MVAr system to eliminate the 5th harmonic issue and a 9MVAr system to eliminate the 12th harmonic problem. He states that both designs will also get the PF above 0.97. By my calculations his solution results in switching 14.2MVAr to eliminate 5th and 12th harmonics on a total 10MW system??? This just seems wrong - commissioning tests have highlighted that there are 9% over-voltage and leading PF issues when we switch these banks in - most protection circuits downstream trip on overvoltage. The consultant who designed this is convinced that this is not a sizing issue but rather a grid supplier issue. Any thoughts?
Additionally, is it normal to combine a harmonics and PFC capacitor design or are these two very separate issues typically dealt with by the installation of two separate systems?
Thirdly, what is the current thinking around capacitor banks with online generators? Should cap banks (PFC and Harmonic Filtering) be turned off to ensure that the generator alternators are not damaged due to sustained leading PF's that may occur? Has anyone ever managed to get a co-generation (grid and generators) system successfully up and running with PFC and Harmonic Filtering?
I have a mining client who operates a copper mine in the DRC. The associated SXEW consists of about 8MW of Electrowinning (rectification) and approx 2MW remaining is linear loads. The mining client had a consultant provide the design for the Harmonic Filters and the PFC. Typically I am used to seeing the harmonics and the PFC being dealt with separately (as they are completely different problems, but both solved using capacitance) but in this instance the consultant has stated that he has 'designed' a combined capacitor bank that he suggests deals with both harmonics and capacitance. According to the consultants calculations, harmonics problems are expected on the 5th and 12th harmonics and he has designed a 5.2MVAr system to eliminate the 5th harmonic issue and a 9MVAr system to eliminate the 12th harmonic problem. He states that both designs will also get the PF above 0.97. By my calculations his solution results in switching 14.2MVAr to eliminate 5th and 12th harmonics on a total 10MW system??? This just seems wrong - commissioning tests have highlighted that there are 9% over-voltage and leading PF issues when we switch these banks in - most protection circuits downstream trip on overvoltage. The consultant who designed this is convinced that this is not a sizing issue but rather a grid supplier issue. Any thoughts?
Additionally, is it normal to combine a harmonics and PFC capacitor design or are these two very separate issues typically dealt with by the installation of two separate systems?
Thirdly, what is the current thinking around capacitor banks with online generators? Should cap banks (PFC and Harmonic Filtering) be turned off to ensure that the generator alternators are not damaged due to sustained leading PF's that may occur? Has anyone ever managed to get a co-generation (grid and generators) system successfully up and running with PFC and Harmonic Filtering?