Zibb
Subscribe to Control Engineering
FirstLight
Email
Print
Reprint
Learn RSS

Medium voltage drives

C.G. Masi, Control Engineering -- Control Engineering, 2/1/2008

Medium voltage drives are those putting out 600 V or more. Motor/drive sets operating at “medium” voltages up to 24,000 V have been built and operated. Generally, such drives are variable speed ac drives intended for high-power applications. They typically achieve power regulation by pulse-width modulation to match drive power with mechanical load requirements at the desired speed.

The load impedance required for a given motor output depends on the drive's output voltage.  Too low a voltage leads to inefficiency because excessive power is lost to parasitic resistance in leads and windings.
Many observers naively assume that the gains available by specifying medium voltage drives arise from the same phenomena that reduce losses in high-voltage power-transmission lines. That simply is not true. Power transmission lines have a fixed length—the distance between the generating station where the power originates to the load where it will be used. Electric motor windings, however, do not have fixed lengths.

In both cases, the power required depends on outside factors. In the motor case, however, the torque available from the motor is proportional to the product of current and the number of turns in the windings. To keep the same torque (and thus power) while reducing current, the motor designer must increase the number of turns proportionately. Assuming a constant current per unit cross-sectional wire area, it is easy to show that motor efficiency is independent of the supply voltage. At the same time, the increased number of turns negates the reduced wire diameter, wiping out any space savings.

While medium-voltage installations can be engineered to achieve both higher efficiency and smaller physical size than low-voltage counterparts, the primary phenomenon motivation for using a medium voltage drive is load-impedance control.

The general formula relating electrical power to supply voltage and load impedance is

P= V 2

____,

Z

where P is the delivered power, V is the supplied voltage, and Z is the complex load impedance. In the case of a motor drive, the impedance’s real part dissipates power directly as heat, while it’s the imaginary part that converts electrical power to mechanical power. Both components, however, combine to limit the current that the load sinks, and thus the power that can be delivered.

Rearranging the equation to solve for Z provides an expression for load impedance as a function of supply voltage at a given power requirement:

Z= V 2

_____

P

Graphing this equation on a log-log plot produces a family of parallel straight lines covering the relevant domain of 1 V to 100,000 V on the horizontal axis and the relevant impedance range of 0.01 Ω to 1,000 Ω. The voltage domain comprises all of the low and medium drive voltages that are significant in industrial control applications. The impedance range goes from that seen in a 1,340 hp motor powered by a 30 kV drive to below the contact resistance achievable by mechanical connections.

That lower limit is what drives engineers to look at medium-voltage drives. It is difficult or impossible—certainly impractical—to reduce those parasitic resistances below the level of 0.1 Ω and usually below 1 Ω. And, that’s not including the actual copper losses in the motor’s windings!

It’s no wonder that engineers planning to control motors developing in excess of 10,000 W of mechanical power increasingly opt for medium-voltage drives supplying 600 V or more.


Author Information
C.G. Masi is a senior editor. Reach him at charlie.masi@reedbusiness.com.

Email
Print
Reprint
Learn RSS

Talkback

We would love your feedback!

Post a comment

» VIEW ALL TALKBACK THREADS

Related Content

Related Content

By This Author

Sponsored Links

 

Advertisement
SPONSORED LINKS

More Content

  • Blogs
  • Discussions
  • Webcasts
  • Podcasts
  • Videos

Blogs

Webcasts

The Top 5 Things You Need to Know About Process Safety
Join this webcast to gain a complete understanding of the technologies, identify which solutions are most appropriate for specific applications and how to tie them in with your existing plant infrastructure.

Machine vision helps take control
Learn from the experts: What machine vision technology can do for control systems, When machine vision is appropriate, How to incorporate machine vision into control systems, And what results others have obtained.

View All Webcasts
Advertisements





NEWSLETTERS

Get engineering industry news, trends, and business-critical information delivered directly to your inbox!

Click on a title below to learn more.

Weekly News (Weekly)
Process Instrumentation & Sensors (Monthly)
System Integration Monthly (Monthly)
Process & Advanced Control (Monthly)
Machine Control Monthly (Monthly)
Information Control (Monthly)
Automation Control (Monthly)
Product Review (Monthly)
Simplified Safety (Monthly)
Fieldbus Facts (Monthly)
PROFInews North American Edition (Monthly)
About Us   |   Advertising Info   |   Site Map   |   Contact Us   |   Useful Sites   |   FREE Subscription   |   RSS
© 2008 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Please visit these other Reed Business sites