T
T.M.Haja Sahib
Guest
A capacitor is not likely to be affected by distortion in the current wave form.It is the distortion in voltage wave form that affects it.Distorted current wave does not necessarily produce significant distortion in voltage wave.Then why have you depicted only current wave forms?The common factor is harmonics. The horrible waveform I posted above (post #17) is, to a fairly large extent, a result of harmonics.
Domestic residences have numerous appliances that take non-linear loads. The non-linear loads result in voltage distortion. Harmonics.
Another story which I have given here before. We installed some variable speed drives in a pumping station. One of the requirements of the project was to measure harmonic distortion before and after installation of the new drives to ensure compliance with an agreed standard.
There were eight drives, none of them very large. The two largest units were 200kW, 12-pulse units
The station had its own 11kV/400V transformer so the point of common coupling (with other consumers) was at 11kV.
When I made the before and after harmonic measurements two things surprised me.
The first was that was no measurable difference between the. It made do difference whether the drives were running in any combination including all and none.
The second thing that surprised me even more was the voltage distortion was outside the compliance requirements before any of our drives were connected.
It made me wonder about the cause of this distortion. Often, such pumping stations are in residential areas and that was the case here. No other heavy users. The conclusion was that the domestic users were the cause. How? All the non-linear loads in aggregate.
Just as an example this is the current taken at my kWh meter with a load of about 0.9kW:
Mostly lights (some CFL, some incandescent), television, computers, probably a few chargers.
Nothing out of the ordinary.
So you can see that harmonics are quite prevalent on domestic supplies.
Not just zinc mills.