The Impact of Supply Voltage Waveform Distortion on Non-Intentional Emission in the Frequency Range 2–150 kHz: An Experimental Study with Power-Line Communication and Selected End-User Equipment
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Improving the security of the system by increasing its observability.
- The use of demand side management (DSM) tools, which is carried out by dynamic billing of electricity consumers and prosumers.
- Forecasting the amount of energy released to the grid by micro-installations.
2. Literature Review
2.1. Gap in the Research Related to Influence of Supply Voltage Distortion on Supraharmonics Emission
2.2. The Background of the Investigations—Identification of the Emission Limits, Compatibility Levels, and Immunity Levels for Conducted Disturbances and Signalling in the Frequency Range 2–150 kHz
- Levels of non-intentional emission referring to individual equipment and the power grid (non-intentional emission).
- Compatibility levels in the power grids (compatibility levels, environment characteristics).
- Intentional emission (transmission levels and mains signalling).
- Immunity test levels.
- Compatibility levels referring to IEC 61000-2-2: AMD1:2017 [5] and AMD2:2018 (dashed line, pink colour, letter “C”).
- Levels of tests for immunity to conducted, differential mode disturbances, and signalling in the frequency range 2 kHz to 150 kHz at AC power ports referring to PN–EN 61000-4–19:2014 [6] (solid line, black colour, notation “P4”—test level with the reference to environment class 4: severe industrial environment; dashed line, colour black—notation “P3”—test level with the reference to environment class 3: typical residential, commercial, and light industrial environment).
3. Characteristic of the Laboratory Hardware and Software Setup
- LED light sources (the three-phase circuit was made using three single-phase LED with a power of 8 W connected in a star, the LED have implemented active power factor correction by an active power filter (APF) in order to keep cosφ = 0.9).
- CFL compact fluorescent lamps (the three-phase circuit was made of three single-phase compact fluorescent lamps with the power of 11 W, 18 W and 20 W connected in a star).
- Three-phase asynchronous induction motor 300 W/400 V/50 Hz rated speed 1390 rpm, powered by a single-phase frequency converter with input voltage 230 V, output voltage 3 × 230 V, power 400 W.
4. Results of an Experimental Study with Power-Line Communication and Selected End-User Equipment
- Supply voltage scenario 1: pure sinusoidal voltage.
- Supply voltage scenario 2: distorted voltage with harmonics according to permissible limits for public networks defined in EN 50160 [3].
- Supply voltage scenario 3: distorted voltage with harmonics used for immunity tests of load according to IEC 61000-4-13 [30]—equipment with the third class of immunity.
- Load condition 0: no load.
- Load condition 1: LED light source.
- Load condition 2: compact fluorescent lamp (CFL) light source.
- Load condition 3: induction motor powered by a frequency converter.
- Increasing the number of attempted connections is the preventive action of the PLC system to keep the transmission successful and can be interpreted as a symptom of deteriorated transmission condition.
- Percentage contribution of the number of failed connections is not directly representative quantity indicating the deterioration of the transmission condition due to increasing number of attempted connections.
- Increasing the duration of failed connections is the direct symptom of the problems with continuity of the communication (referring to ADDAX recommendation the threshold value for the duration of failed connections indicating communication problem is 180 s in one hour).
4.1. Case 1 (Supply Voltage Scenario 1, Load Condition 0): Operation of the Tested PRIME PLC System without Loads during Sinusoidal Supply Voltage—Reference Analysis
- Local maximum of the non-intentional emission level (noise, background): Nmax = 65.72 dBµV.
- The intentional transmission signal level related to Nmax: S(Nmax) = 87.51 dBµV.
- Local minimum signal-to-noise ratio: SNRlocal = 21.79 dB.
- Signal-to-noise ratio in the full transmission band: SNRband = 31.21 dB.
4.2. Case 2 (Supply Voltage Scenario 1, Load Condition 1): Operation of the Tested PRIME PLC System with LED Light Sources during Sinusoidal Supply Voltage
- Local maximum of the non-intentional emission level (noise, background): Nmax = 75.63 dBµV.
- The intentional transmission signal level related to Nmax: S(Nmax) = 92.67 dBµV.
- Local minimum signal-to-noise ratio: SNRlocal = 17.04 dB.
- Signal-to-noise ratio in the full transmission band: SNRband = 30.63 dB.
- Statistics of the connection in the presented case are expressed by:
- Total number of the connections: 53 (including 44 successful and 9 failed connections).
- Duration of failed connections in one hour: 2 s.
4.3. Case 3 (Supply Voltage Scenario 2, Load Condition 1): Operation of the Tested PRIME PLC System with LED Light Sources during Distorted Supply Voltage Referring to Permissible Limits for Public Grid EN 50160
- Local maximum of the non-intentional emission level (noise, background): Nmax = 77.08 dBµV.
- The intentional transmission signal level related to Nmax: S(Nmax) = 93.55 dBµV.
- Local minimum signal-to-noise ratio: SNRlocal = 16.47 dB.
- Signal-to-noise ratio in the full transmission band: SNRband = 23.57 dB.
- Total number of the connections: 103 (including 83 successful and 20 failed connections).
- Duration of failed connections in one hour: 187 s.
4.4. Case 4 (Supply Voltage Scenario 4, Load Condition 1) Operation of the Tested PRIME PLC System with LED Light Sources during Distorted Supply Voltage Referring to Immunity Test Limits
- Local maximum of the non-intentional emission level (noise, background): Nmax = 89.82 dBµV.
- The intentional transmission signal level related to Nmax: S(Nmax) = 92.96 dBµV.
- Local minimum signal-to-noise ratio: SNRlocal = 3.14 dB.
- Signal-to-noise ratio in the full transmission band: SNRband = 7.61 dB.
- Total number of the connections: 106 (including 86 successful and 20 failed connections).
- Duration of failed connections in one hour: 371 s.
4.5. Comparative Analysis: Operation of the Tested PRIME PLC System under the Different Scenario of Supply Voltage Distortion and Variant Types of Loads
- No-load and sinusoidal supply voltage (reference condition)—1 case.
- LED light sources (sinusoidal, EN 50160, IEC 61000 4-13)—3 cases.
- CFL light sources (sinusoidal, EN 50160, IEC 61000 4-13)—3 cases.
- Induction motor powered by PWM (sinusoidal, EN 50160, IEC 61000 4-13)—3 cases.
- With LED load the SNR coefficient decreased from 30.06 dB (SNRband)/17.04 dB (SNRlocal) for the sinusoidal normal condition to 7.61 dB(SNRband)/3.14 dB (SNRlocal) for margin distorted condition, which made PLC transmission more difficult;
- With CFL load the SNR coefficient decreased from 26.31 dB (SNRband)/20.61 dB (SNRlocal) for the sinusoidal normal condition to 9.73 dB (SNRband)/2.94 dB (SNRlocal) for margin distorted condition, which made PLC transmission more difficult;
- With induction motor powered by PWM converter, the SNR coefficient decreased from 18.97 dB (SNRband)/10.11 dB (SNRlocal) for the sinusoidal normal condition to 2.49 dB (SNRband)/−0.79dB (SNRlocal) for margin distorted condition, which made PLC transmissions impossible.
- With LED load the number of attempted connections increased two times and the duration of failed connections increased from 2 s to 371 s when the distortion of the supply voltage was increasing;
- With CFL load the number of attempted connections were relatively higher than in the case of LED load and the duration of failed connections increased from 186 s to 366 s;
- With induction motor powered by PWM converter the duration of the failed connections obtained the highest value of 551 s noticed under the distorted supply condition. Additionally, in the case of the margin-investigated supply voltage distortion, the PLC system was not able to retry the connections and the number of the attempted connection was relatively small.
5. Discussion
- For all investigated loads (CFL, LED, the motor with PWM) it was observed that increasing the content of higher harmonics in the supply voltage from the sinusoidal condition, by the waveform distortion representing permissible content of harmonic in a public grid, to the waveform distortion defined in the immunity test of the equipment, resulted in a higher level of non-intentional emission in the range 2–150 kHz. As a consequence, the SNR derived from the local maximum magnitude of the background signal and associated with it the local magnitude of the transmission signal of the investigated PRIME PLC system was consistently decreasing, from 17.04 dB to 3.14 dB (for LED), from 20.61 dB to 2.94 dB (for CFL) and from 10.11 dB to −0.79 dB (for the motor with PWM). The SNR calculated on the basis of power of the transmission signal and power of the background signal in the transmission band was also decreasing, from 30.06 dB to 7.61 dB (for LED), from 26.31 dB to 9.73 dB (for CFL), and from 18.97 dB to 2.49 dB (for the motor with PWM), respectively.
- An indirect result of the supply voltage distortion is an increasing number of the connections activated by the investigated PLC system in order to prevent loss of the connection. However, in case of a high level of supply voltage distortions, the duration of the failed connections increased significantly. The duration of failed connections decreased from 2 s to 371 s for the LED load, and from 186 s to 366 s for the CFL load. The highest value of the duration of failed connections, 551 s, was achieved in the case of the induction motor powered by PWM.
- The scenarios of the supply voltage distortion used in the investigation represent a relatively high level of deterioration (direct sum of harmonics permissible harmonic for public grid is represented by THD equals 11.62%; voltage distortion used in the immunity test equipment of the third class of immunity is represented by THD equals 25.69%). However, the formulated relation between the condition of the supply voltage and non-intentional emission suggests extending the discussion about the condition of the tests of non-intentional emissions, which currently are performed under sinusoidal conditions. A proposition for an extended test using deteriorated supply voltage, referring to the permissible level of THD in a low-voltage public network, gradually increasing from a few percentage points to 8%, can be considered.
- The proposition of extended testing of non-intentional emissions under a distorted supply voltage might also be valuable for a more effective filter specification and selection for particular power line communication technologies.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Programmable AC Source/Kikusui PCR500LA | Specification |
---|---|
Power capacity | 500 VA |
Input voltage variation (with respect to changes in the rated range) | ±0.1% |
Output current variation (with respect to 0% to 100% changes in the rating) | Within ±0.1 V/±0.2 V (output voltage range 100 V/200 V) |
Output frequency variation in AC mode (40–999.9 Hz) | Within ±0.3% |
Ripple noise: DC mode (5 Hz to 1 MHz component) | 0.1 Vrms or less |
Output frequency stability (with respect to changes in the rated range) | Within ±5 × 10−5 |
Output voltage waveform distortion | 0.3% or less |
Output voltage response speed | 30 µs |
Compliant standards | EMC Directive 89/336/EEC EN61326:1997/A2:2001 Emission Class A IEC 61000-3-2:2000 IEC 61000-3-3:1995/A:2001 |
Reference impedances/authorised university solution | Specification |
Nominal frequency | 50 Hz |
Nominal RMS current | 5 A |
Nominal impedance | Phase wire zA = (0.24 + j0.15)Ω for 50 Hz RA = 240 mΩ ± 0.2%, LA = 477.5 µH ± 1% Neutral wire zN = (0.16 + j0.10) Ω for 50 Hz RN = 160 mΩ ± 0.2%, LN = 318.3 µH ± 1% |
Signal recorder/authorised university solution | Specification |
FPGA platform | National Instrument cRIO FPGA 1 MS/s |
Voltage input module | National Instrument NI-9223 C Series ±10 V, 1 MS/s, 16-Bit, Simultaneous Input, 4-Differential Channel |
Voltage Transducer | LEM CV 3–1000 Primary voltage ±1000 V Secondary voltage ±10 V Frequency bandwidth DC ÷ 500 kHz Accuracy 0.2% |
Odd Harmonics | Even Harmonics | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Undividable by 3 | Dividable by 3 | ||||
Order | Amplitude | Order | Amplitude | Order | Amplitude |
5 | 6.0% | 3 | 5.0% | 2 | 2.0% |
7 | 5.0% | 9 | 1.5% | 4 | 1.0% |
11 | 3.5% | 15 | 0.5% | 6… 24 | 0.5% |
13 | 3.0% | 21 | 0.5% | >24 | 0.5% |
17 | 2.0% | >21 | 0.5% | ||
19 | 1.5% | ||||
23 | 1.5% | ||||
25 | 1.5% | ||||
>25 | 1% |
The Harmonic Order h = 3n + 1 | Class 3 | The Harmonic Order h = 3n | Class 3 |
---|---|---|---|
Test Levels in %U1 | Test Levels in %U1 | ||
5 | 12 | 3 | 9 |
7 | 10 | 9 | 4 |
11 | 7 | 15 | 3 |
13 | 7 | 21 | 2 |
17 | 6 | 27 | 2 |
19 | 6 | 33 | 2 |
23 | 6 | 39 | 2 |
25 | 6 | ||
29 | 5 | ||
31 | 3 | ||
35 | 3 | ||
37 | 3 |
Sinusoidal Supply Voltage | No-Load | LED | CFL | Induction Motor with PWM | |
S(Nmax) | (dBµV) | 87.51 | 92.67 | 94.09 | 93.43 |
Nmax | (dBµV) | 65.72 | 75.63 | 73.47 | 83.32 |
SNRlocal | (dB) | 21.79 | 17.04 | 20.61 | 10.11 |
Psignal | (dB) | −31.22 | −23.63 | −25.37 | −24.38 |
Pnoise | (dB) | −62.42 | −54.26 | −51.68 | −43.35 |
SNRband | (dB) | 31.21 | 30.63 | 26.31 | 18.97 |
Distorted Supply Voltage EN 50160 (Table 2) | No-Load | LED | CFL | Induction Motor with PWM | |
S(Nmax) | (dBµV) | 87.51 | 93.55 | 92.46 | 92.92 |
Nmax | (dBµV) | 65.72 | 77.08 | 78.12 | 81.22 |
SNRlocal | (dB) | 21.79 | 16.47 | 14.35 | 11.70 |
Psignal | (dB) | −31.22 | −22.84 | −23.53 | −23.99 |
Pnoise | (dB) | −62.42 | −46.41 | −46.55 | −42.42 |
SNRband | (dB) | 31.21 | 23.57 | 23.02 | 18.43 |
Distorted Supply Voltage IEC 61000-4-13 Class 3 (Table 3) | No-Load | LED | CFL | Induction Motor with PWM | |
S(Nmax) | (dBµV) | 87.51 | 92.96 | 91.80 | 91.11 |
Nmax | (dBµV) | 65.72 | 89.82 | 88.86 | 91.90 |
SNRlocal | (dB) | 21.79 | 3.14 | 2.94 | −0.79 |
Psignal | (dB) | −31.22 | −24.92 | −24.48 | −29.45 |
Pnoise | (dB) | −62.42 | −32.53 | −34.22 | −31.94 |
SNRband | (dB) | 31.21 | 7.61 | 9.73 | 2.49 |
Sinusoidal Supply Voltage | LED | CFL | Induction Motor with PWM |
---|---|---|---|
total number of attempted connections | 53 | 95 | 110 |
number of successful connections | 44 | 76 | 90 |
number of failed connections | 9 | 19 | 20 |
duration of failed connections in one hour (s) | 2 | 186 | 186 |
Distorted supply voltage EN 50160 (Table 2) | LED | CFL | Induction motor with PWM |
total number of connections | 103 | 54 | 93 |
number of successful connections | 83 | 44 | 83 |
number of failed connections | 20 | 10 | 10 |
duration of failed connections in one hour (s) | 187 | 187 | 551 |
Distorted supply voltage IEC 61000-4-13 Class 3 (Table 3) | LED | CFL | Induction motor with PWM |
total number of connections | 106 | 104 | 28 |
number of successful connections | 80 | 84 | 24 |
number of failed connections | 20 | 20 | 4 |
duration of failed connections in one hour (s) | 371 | 366 | 192 |
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Wasowski, M.; Sikorski, T.; Wisniewski, G.; Kostyla, P.; Szymanda, J.; Habrych, M.; Gornicki, L.; Sokol, J.; Jurczyk, M. The Impact of Supply Voltage Waveform Distortion on Non-Intentional Emission in the Frequency Range 2–150 kHz: An Experimental Study with Power-Line Communication and Selected End-User Equipment. Energies 2021, 14, 777. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14030777
Wasowski M, Sikorski T, Wisniewski G, Kostyla P, Szymanda J, Habrych M, Gornicki L, Sokol J, Jurczyk M. The Impact of Supply Voltage Waveform Distortion on Non-Intentional Emission in the Frequency Range 2–150 kHz: An Experimental Study with Power-Line Communication and Selected End-User Equipment. Energies. 2021; 14(3):777. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14030777
Chicago/Turabian StyleWasowski, Marek, Tomasz Sikorski, Grzegorz Wisniewski, Pawel Kostyla, Jaroslaw Szymanda, Marcin Habrych, Lukasz Gornicki, Jaroslaw Sokol, and Mariusz Jurczyk. 2021. "The Impact of Supply Voltage Waveform Distortion on Non-Intentional Emission in the Frequency Range 2–150 kHz: An Experimental Study with Power-Line Communication and Selected End-User Equipment" Energies 14, no. 3: 777. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14030777
APA StyleWasowski, M., Sikorski, T., Wisniewski, G., Kostyla, P., Szymanda, J., Habrych, M., Gornicki, L., Sokol, J., & Jurczyk, M. (2021). The Impact of Supply Voltage Waveform Distortion on Non-Intentional Emission in the Frequency Range 2–150 kHz: An Experimental Study with Power-Line Communication and Selected End-User Equipment. Energies, 14(3), 777. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14030777