5.1 SWITCHING ON - SINGLE-PHASE
When a current is switched on in a d.c. inductive circuit, it rises from zero and gradually approaches its steady value, the rate depending on the inductance and resistance of the circuit, as explained in the manual ‘Fundamentals of Electricity 1’. The behaviour when an a.c. circuit is switched on is however quite different, and there is no time delay in the build-up of current.
FIGURE 5.1
SWITCHING ON - 90° LAG
Figure 5.1(a) shows the voltage in an a.c. circuit
having inductance only and little resistance.
This is the condition for a 90° lag, and the
current peaks occur at the same instants as the voltage zeros. Figure 5.1(b) shows the corresponding current
wave both before and after the current is switched on, which is assumed to
occur at the point M at one of the voltage zeros. The dotted wave in Figure 5.1(b) is what the
current should be doing after switching on - namely lagging 90° behind the voltage.
But this would entail the current jumping suddenly from
zero at point M just before the switch-on to its maximum an instant after -
which it clearly cannot do. What happens
is that the current grows so that the whole current waveform moves bodily
upward (in this case) by an amount equal to its amplitude, as shown in full
line in Figure 5.1(b). If this
displaced wave is examined closely, it will be seen that
there is no jump at the moment of switch-on (M) - it is zero immediately before
and immediately after - and it also lags 90° on the voltage wave, its peaks coming opposite the voltage zeros.
It is completely asymmetrical at the instant of
switching on, but it gradually regains symmetry a few cycles later; the more
resistance that is present, the quicker symmetry is restored. Where, as here, the displacement is complete
and equal to the a.c. amplitude, the wave is said to be ‘100% asymmetrical’.
If, instead, the current had been switched on at the
point N at one of the voltage peaks,
as in Figure 5.1(c), the effect would be different. At a voltage peak the current with a 90° lag would in any case be zero so there would be no need for any
sudden change at the moment of switch-on - it would be zero both immediately
before and immediately after the switching.
There would therefore be no asymmetry to compensate for a jump, and the
current would start and remain symmetrical throughout; it would be ‘0%
asymmetrical’.
With 100% asymmetry the current peak is about double the
symmetrical peak, and this itself is √ 2 times the symmetrical rms value. So the asymmetrical peak is 2√ 2 or
2.83 times the rms. In practice, because
the current has already started to regain symmetry by the time the first peak
appears, the ‘doubling factor’ is usually taken to be 2.55.
Figures 5.1(b) and 5.1(c) are the two extreme cases with
a 90° lag; switching at the instant of voltage zero and at the instant of
a voltage peak. The general case would
be somewhere in between, where there would be partial asymmetry, something
between 0% and 100%.
FIGURE 5.2
SWITCHING ON – GENERAL CASE (PARTIAL ASYMMETRY)
With the general case of a circuit having both
inductance and resistance the power factor would be higher than zero and the
current lag would be less than 90° (see Figure
5.2). In this case the current has to
jump from zero before the switch-on to a point something less than peak value
immediately after. Therefore the
asymmetry to compensate for this jump is less than a full amplitude (100%), as
shown in Figure 5.2. There is then ‘partial
asymmetry’, between 0% and 100%.
5.2 SWITCHING ON – 3 PHASE
All the above discussion has been about a single-phase
voltage being switched onto a circuit.
However, most switching on platform and shore equipment is 3-phase. In a 3-phase circuit the voltage phases are
120° apart so that, even if at the instant of switching one of them
occurs at a voltage zero or voltage peak, the other two will not be so, and
they will be at voltage points somewhere between zero and peak. Therefore, even if one phase of current is
wholly asymmetrical or wholly symmetrical, the other two will be partially
asymmetrical. This is shown in Figure
5.3 where red-phase current is 100% asymmetrical; the other two in that case
will be 50% asymmetrical in the opposite direction.
FIGURE 5.3
SWITCHING ON - 3-PHASE (PF ZERO)
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