klapton
Industrial
- May 27, 2021
- 1
Hello
I understand that strength of a power grid can be defined by the respective short circuit ratio or SCR. A lower SCR (i.e. 'weak grid') implies a high impedance grid which means fluctuation in current will cause voltage to change more so than a higher SCR (i.e. 'strong grid'). A weak grid also means protection may not operate correctly as fault levels may be too low.
I have been looking at large utility scale solar inverters and often they specify what the minimum SCR is for their inverters to operate.
What does this minimum inverter SCR mean and what is implied by it?
I understand that strength of a power grid can be defined by the respective short circuit ratio or SCR. A lower SCR (i.e. 'weak grid') implies a high impedance grid which means fluctuation in current will cause voltage to change more so than a higher SCR (i.e. 'strong grid'). A weak grid also means protection may not operate correctly as fault levels may be too low.
I have been looking at large utility scale solar inverters and often they specify what the minimum SCR is for their inverters to operate.
What does this minimum inverter SCR mean and what is implied by it?