Sequences

ggunn

PE (Electrical), NABCEP certified
Location
Austin, TX, USA
Occupation
Consulting Electrical Engineer - Photovoltaic Systems
I am reading a paper about short circuit current calculations; the author speaks of positive, negative, and zero sequences but doesn't define them. I have heard the terms before but I never truly understood them; can someone enlighten me as to what they mean? I would appreciate it. I can see that they have something to do with AC impedances.

Mods: please remove the duplicate from the General Electrical forum.
 
Larry is correct, sequences are part of symmetrical components. Kind of hard core engineering.

These are very helpful when analyzing unbalanced 3-phase circuits. We can use the negative sequence to look at if a utility fuse has blown causing our transformer to develope a phantom voltage thus fooling phase loss relays. Zero sequence currents are used with GF systems and 'artificial neutral and grounding' transformers.
 
And then there's this kind:

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