capacitors inside the EUT recharge at once,
causing a large increase in AC mains current.
This increase can trip circuit breakers, open
fuses, and even destroy solid-state rectifiers. Most design engineers correctly protect
against this inrush current during power cycling, but many do not consider the similar effects of voltage sags. Be careful when the test
procedure is developed; if you use a sag generator that lacks sufficient current capability it
will incorrectly pass the equipment if there is
insufficient current available to blow a fuse or
trip a circuit breaker in a half-cycle.
Another common EUT failure mechanism
occurs when a sensor detects the voltage
sag and decides to shut down the EUT. In a
straightforward example, a three-phase EUT
might have a phase-rotation relay that incorrectly interprets an unbalanced voltage sag
as a phase reversal and therefore shuts down
the EUT. A more atypical example would be
if you had an airflow sensor mounted near a
fan, it detected that the fan had slowed down
momentarily, and the equipment software
misinterpreted the message from this sensor
as indicating that the EUT cooling system
had failed. In this case, a software fan failure
signal delay is the solution to improve sag
immunity.
Another common EUT failure mechanism
involves an uncommon sequence of events.
For example, in one case, a voltage sag was
applied to the EUT and its main contactor
opened with a bang. But further investigation
revealed that a small relay, wired in series
with the main contactor coil, actually opened
because it received an open relay contact
from a stray water sensor. That sensor, in
turn, opened because its small 24-VDC supply output dropped to 18 V during the sag.
The solution was an inexpensive bulk capacitor across the 24-VDC supply.
Many other failure mechanisms can take
place during voltage sags. The question to
the test engineer will always be: How do we
fix this problem? Usually, there is a simple,
low-cost fix once the problem is identified.
Protect your equipment
There is no one best place to locate a protective device for all your plant equipment. An
equipment protection program should begin
with identifying specific equipment items that
are sensitive to voltage sags, either through
hard experience or with the support of the
manufacturer. The ubiquitous UPS may not
provide enough of the right protection.
However, there are areas where voltage
sags have a history of interfering with plant
operations by affecting programmable logic
POWER QUALITY
controllers as well as relays and contactors
in sensitive equipment. The best approach to
handling those problems is to specify new
equipment according to a particular voltage
ride-through specification, such as SEMI
F47.
If you have recently upgraded to adjust-able-speed drives (ASDs) in your plant, you
are in luck. ASDs can ride through voltage
sags because of the inertia of the motor and
the connected load. Some ASD manufacturers offer an optional voltage sag ride-through
feature.
Very short sags can be tolerated with fer-roresonant transformers, magnetic synthesizers, or active series compensators. Others
have employed static transfer switches and
fast transfer switches that can operate within
two cycles to protect overly sensitive loads.
At PSL, we believe that only in extreme cases should devices that eliminate voltage sags
on the AC circuit be considered because this
is the most expensive possible solution. However, the final selection of a solution requires
weighing the cost of equipment and production losses against the cost of protection. ■
—Andreas Eberhard (aeberhard
@ powerstandards.com) is
vice president of technical services
for Power Standard Labs.
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