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UPS SYSTEM TRAINING

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Title: UPS SYSTEM TRAINING


1
UPS SYSTEM TRAINING
  • Design, Application, Testing and Maintenance
  • Peter Ho, P.Eng.
  • Schneider Electric

2
Review Electrical Electronic Fundamentals
  • Electrical (R, I, C)
  • Resistance ( R )
  • Definition The intensity of a constant electric
    current in a circuit is directly proportional to
    the electromotive force and inversely
    proportional to the resistance (George Simon Ohm)

3
Review Electrical Electronic Fundamentals
  • ReL/A eresistivity of the material
  • No phase shift between V and I in a PURE
    resistance circuit (in phase)
  • It is temperature dependant
  • It consumes energy (unable to store energy)

4
  • Inductance ( L )
  • It is a electro-magnetic device
  • Definition A circuit has a inductance 1 henry
    when current change at 1A/sec then induces an EMF
    of 1 volt in that circuit (Joseph Henry)
  • LV/di/dt VLdi/dt II/Lf Vdt
  • V and I are not in phase ( 90 degree )
  • Pure L can not consume energy only stores energy
  • Pure L is not temperature dependant
  • It is not possible to change the I through an L
    INSTANTLY
  • XL 2 pri f L

5
  • Capacitance ( C )
  • It is a electro-static device
  • Definition A circuit has a capacitance of 1
    farad when a charge of 1 coulomb is required to
    raise the potential difference by 1 volt (Michael
    Faraday)
  • I C dv/dt V 1/C f I dt
  • Pure C can not consume energy but store energy
  • C is not temperature dependant
  • It is not possible to change the voltage across a
    C INSTANTLY
  • Xc 2 pri f c
  • The v and I are not in phase (90 degree )

6
  • QUESTIONS?

7
  • Understanding linear and non-linear
  • Definition
  • Linear Any electrical and electronic
    devices draw current in proportional to the
    voltage.
  • Non-linear Any electrical and electronic
    devices draw current not in proportional to the
    voltage
  • There are four types of load
  • Linear Balanced and unbalanced
  • Non-linear Balanced and non-balanced

8
  • Power Factor, Displacement PF, and K-rating
  • The ratio between V and I
  • The ratio between true power, reactive power
  • Cosine of that angle is called power factor of
    that circuit.
  • True power (Real power, active power W)

9
Crest Factor
  • Only for pure resistance
  • Reactive power VAR is only for L and C
  • Store energy in the first ¼ cycle and reflects
    back to the source on the second ¼ cycle
  • Apparent power ( VA )
  • It is a calculated value
  • CF PEAK/RMS ratio that reflects
  • the nature of the load

10
  • Displacement Power Factor
  • It is because of non-linear load hence creating
    harmonic component
  • Harmonic I can be shifted so that lagging behind
    the voltage (f)
  • This will force the I (f) to shift along with the
    V (f)
  • The total I2 I (f) 2 I (h) 2
  • The shift of the I (f) wrt the V (f) is called
    displacement
  • The cosine of that angle between I (f) and V (f)
    is called DPF

11
Displacement Power Factor
12
  • Harmonics
  • It is a by-product of any waveform that can be
    described in term of Fourier series
  • F (t) A0 Sum An sin (nwt O)
  • Ao DC component
  • W 2 pri f
  • 0 phase angle between V and I
  • n integer
  • A Magnitude of the n th harmonic
  • Any electrical and electronic devices that
    operate in a saturation mode will produce
    harmonic (I)

13
  • K-Factor (Rating)
  • It is defined as the non-linear load tolerance of
    a transformer or coil before it overheats
  • K1 Purely linear
  • K7 Less than 50 of 3 phase non-line
  • K13 3 phase non linear load
  • K20 Both single and 3 phase non-linear load
  • K factor vs THD curve

14
  • Electrical Disturbances
  • Control and uncontrolled
  • Type of electrical disturbances
  • Transients, impulses, oscillations, sags, swells,
    voltage deviations,
  • Brownouts, power interruptions, v phase
    unbalance, frequency
  • Deviation, electrical noise, EMI, etc and
    harmonic distortion

15
Electrical Disturbances
16
  • Electrical Grounding
  • Conservation of energy theory
  • Grounding safety
  • Grounding means connected to the Earth
  • Earth Zero potential reference point
  • System (I), equipment (no I), bonding (no I), N-G
    jumper (I)
  • Only ONE N-G connection is allowed for each
    ISOLATED electrical system

17
Electrical Grounding
18
Electrical Bonding
19
  • Electronic - Diode, SCR, Bi-polar IGBT
  • Type of solid
  • Metal (carrier density 10 power 22)
  • Semi-metal (cod 10 to the power 17-21)
  • Semi-conductor (cod 10 to the power 17)
  • Insulator (cod less than 1)

20
Semi-conductors
21
  • Diode
  • Two layers of semi-conductor (simple, building
    blocks)
  • Richardsons Equation
  • I A T2 e b/T
  • I Emission current
  • A Emission constant
  • T Absolute temperature
  • B work function, energy required by 1 electron
    to overcome the potential barrier (unit
    electronic volt)
  • Way to force the e jump out the orbit becoming
    free
  • Thermal, photo, secondary and cathode emission
  • Turn on and turn off conditions

22
Diodes
23
  • Bi-polar Transistor
  • Three layers semi-conductors
  • Current control device
  • Icy B times I b
  • It must be operated in the saturation mode

24
  • Silicon Controlled Rectifier (SCR)
  • 4 layers semi-conductors (two transistors back to
    back)
  • Current controlled device
  • Turn on and turn off conditions
  • Reverse recovery time and charge

25
Silicon Controlled Rectifier (SCR)
26
Insulated Gate Bi-polar Transistor IGBT
  • Voltage controlled device
  • Temperature dependant
  • Fast switching with high power carrier
  • Both bi-polar transistor and IGBT must be
    operated in a saturation
  • Mode for any ups operation (creating harmonic)

27
Insulated Gate Bi-polar Transistor IGBT
28
UPS SYSTEM STUDY
  • Why it is needed?
  • Power quality issues (local and surrounding)
  • Nature and non-nature (human)
  • Equipment design limitation
  • Protection of investment and life cycle
  • Keep employment

29
  • Application of UPS
  • Justification
  • Any environment that needs 99.99 operational
    up-time
  • Critical operations (life and )
  • Insurance requirement

30
  • Types of UPS Systems
  • On line and off line
  • Static and rotary
  • Battery and non-battery
  • Double and delta conversion
  • Flywheel technology
  • Modern microprocessor control or traditional

31
  • UPS Configuration
  • Single
  • Parallel with or without system cabinet (for
    power or redundancy)
  • Hot standby
  • Two ups units with STS (dual application)
  • Hot tie application
  • Frequency convertor
  • UPS conditioning without battery

32
UPS Configuration
33
UPS Configuration
34
UPS BUILDING BLOCKS
  • Most common UPS consists of the following
    building blocks
  • Rectifier, charger, chopper, inverter, battery,
    bypass static switch
  • Most common UPS consists of the following
    component
  • Switch devices Diode, SCR, Transistor IGBT
  • Disconnect devices Circuit breaker, disconnect
    switch, contactor, static switch
  • Protection devices CB, fuse, fusible disconnect
    switch, air and liquid cooling system, earthquake
  • Electrical system isolation device isolation
    transformer, M-G set
  • Electrical component Resistor, inductor and
    capacitor
  • Measurement parameters Voltage, current, rate of
    change of XXX, T, time Y-M-D
  • Measurement devices PT, CT, Hall effect

35
  • RECTIFIER
  • Rectifier and charger (different)
  • Half and full wave
  • Uncontrolled, half controlled and full
    controlled
  • Unit-directional and bi-directional
  • Main function Change AC into DC
  • Major switching devices Diode, SCR, IGBT
  • Input current harmonic order is N/-1 N of
    switching devices

36
  • CHOPPER
  • It is a DC to DC converter
  • Step up or step down
  • Major components are Coil, diode, capacitor and
    high speed switching devices
  • What is a DC (duty cycle)?
  • Vout V in times DC
  • Vout can not be more than 5 times the V in
  • Reduce of battery in the system (only for lower
    KVA system)

37
BREAK TIME
38
  • BATTERY
  • It is a electro-chemistry device
  • It can only store energy but can not create
    energy
  • Fuel cell is the opposite of battery
  • The battery voltage is determined by the ACTIVE
    material
  • The battery capacity (A/H) is determined by the
    amount (weight) of the ACTIVE material
  • For example The lead acid has 2.1V/cell 55
    AH/Kg
  • The nickel cadmium has 1.35 V/cell
    165AH/Kg

39
BATTERY TYPES
40
  • Factors Affecting Battery Performance
  • , voltage, current, voltage regulation, nature
    of discharge, size, aging, environment condition
    (heat), AC ripple and more
  • AS per Arrhenius Equation
  • The worst factor that affects battery performance
    is temperature
  • (Thermal runaway) - It is a non-reversible
  • The internal battery Z decrease, the internal
    float current will be increased with the same
    voltage - the internal temperature will rise and
    may cause in accelerated dry out (melting the
    entire battery)
  • As per Ohms Law
  • For batteries are in series configuration the
    individual voltage across each battery SHOULD be
    the same
  • The only item that affects the V is the internal
    individual Z
  • That is the reason the battery Z tester is widely
    used
  • However the result may not 100 reflect the
    condition of the battery

41
  • Since the battery is a perfect device to store
    electrical energy
  • Safety is the most important matter
  • For example, C/D seal battery UPS - 12- 475 FR
    has a 134AH_at_20 hours and 475W_at_15 minutes rating
  • However the maximum discharge current is 800A and
    the short circuit current is 5000A
  • Hence 12 V at 5000A 60,000 W (60KW) of power
    available at the battery fault location (terminal)

42
  • INVERTER
  • Change DC to AC
  • The switch devices can be transistor, SCR and
    IGBT
  • Modulation can be AM, FM, PM (PM, PAM, PTM, PWM,
    PPM)
  • PWM control the Vout without adding any power
    component
  • Eliminate lower order harmonic. The high order
    harmonic can
  • be easy filtered by smaller L/C network
  • The inverter output frequency, amplitude, wave
    shape and phase shift are controlled by the
    switching device duty cycle

43
  • Internal Static Switch
  • It is an essential part of UPS to remain no break
    transfer
  • Also refer as internal automatic bypass switch
  • It consists of 6 SCR (2 per phase)
  • It is also bounded with SCR limitation and
    operation
  • Using nature commuting to turn off SCR
  • The worst case of the SS is un-controlled turn on
    with condition such as dv/dt (Ic C dv/dt)

44
  • UPS Specification
  • Input section (voltage, current, frequency, slew
    rate, 3 wires or 4 wires plus G, delta or wyn
    source, isolated or non-isolated)
  • Battery section (wet or seal) back up time,
    charging time requirement and monitoring system
  • Single or parallel strings, of battery (DC bus
    voltage)
  • Output section (Same as input with additional
    sync requirement)
  • Forward and reverse transfer operation and
    limitation
  • Bypass (internal and external) section

45
  • UPS System Testing Commissioning
  • Factory testing (destruction)
  • Site testing (non-destruction)
  • Heat run with load bank (linear or non-linear)
    for X hours
  • Harmonic (V I) measurement of input and output
  • Step load requirement (0, 25, 50 75, 100
    125, 150 and 200)
  • System overall n calculation (KW to KW)
  • Battery discharging test as per sale order
  • Battery recharging measurement and 2nd
    discharging test
  • Noise and heat measurement
  • Balanced and unbalanced output load testing
  • Forward and reverse transfer operation waveform
    capture
  • Maintenance bypass kirk key operation

46
  • Standby generator testing
  • To observe UPS and generator interface operation
  • Step load testing to ensure leading PF creating
    from the UPS
  • To ensure there is no hunting
  • Most important parameter is generator output
    frequency (amplitude and slew rate)
  • UPS experience minimum or no alarm due to
    non-sync issue

47
Generator
  • Generator operation when UPS is on bypass (live
    load)
  • In-rush current handing due to input transformers
    and/or inline inductors
  • Generator sizing (1, 25, 50, 100 or higher)
  • Generator feedback circuit

48
  • UPS System Maintenance
  • Safety 1
  • Trust no one but yourself
  • Trust your calibrated testing equipment
  • Wear your PPE
  • Respect electricity
  • Dont assume anything

49
  • Input section
  • Measure V, I, F, PF, DPF, THD, KW, KVA
  • Battery section
  • Measure cell voltage, ripple AC V, I, individual
    cell internal Z and SG of wet cell
  • Output section
  • Measure V, I, F, PF, DPF, THD, KW, KVA and CF
  • Voltage drop across any CB, contactor and SCR
    (very careful)


50
  • Internal SS section
  • Measure SCR leakage current when the system is on
    line
  • Capacitors
  • Measure input and output capacitor bank current
    and compare with each other
  • Same for the DC capacitors
  • Coil (choke)
  • Measure the current of each branch

51
  • Visual inspection
  • Transformers, coil discolor (sign of overheat)
  • All AC and DC capacitors for unusual swelling
  • Any cooling fans
  • Any overheating cabling
  • Dirty air filters
  • Any contactor contact oxidation

52
  • Replacement component
  • AC capacitors (filtering and timing type)
  • AC (7-8 years) DC (5-6 years)
  • Battery (4-5 years for seal and 15-18 years for
    wet cell)
  • Cooling fans (5-6 years)

53
External Interface
  • Communication option (RS-232, 485, modbus, SNMP,
    dry relay
  • Heating, smoking, fire, liquid, security, Co2,
    REPO (dedicated
  • dry set of contact NO or NC)

54
Case Studies
  • SS failure due to thunderstorm and lightning
  • Generators governor destroyed due to UPS on
    bypass mode (high CF)
  • Non-TVSS UPS system installation as result, UPS
    input EMI filer damaged (Short circuit between
    phases)
  • Missing N-G jumper creating UPS high output
    voltage

55
  • THANK YOU!
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