FUNDAMENTALS OF
HARMONICS
            By:
    Dr. Shazia Hasan
 Asst. Professor, EEE Dept
           WAVEFORM DISTORTION
• A STEADY-STATE DEVIATION FROM AN IDEAL SINE WAVE OF POWER
  FREQUENCY PRINCIPALLY CHARACTERIZED BY THE SPECTRAL
  CONTENT OF THE DEVIATION.
       DC OFFSET
       HARMONICS
       INTER HARMONICS
       SUBHARMONICS
       NOISE
                        DC OFFSET
• THE PRESENCE OF A DC VOLTAGE OR CURRENT IN AN AC POWER SYSTEM
  IS TERMED DC OFFSET.
• EFFECTS: IT MAY SATURATE THE TRANSFORMER CORE CAUSING
  ADDITIONAL HEATING AND LOSS OF TRANSFORMER LIFE.
       DC Offset
•
                        HARMONICS
    HARMONICS ARE SINUSOIDAL VOLTAGES OR CURRENTS HAVING
    FREQUENCIES THAT ARE INTEGER MULTIPLES OF THE FREQUENCY AT
    WHICH THE SUPPLY SYSTEM IS DESIGNED TO OPERATE.
• CAUSE:HARMONICS IN POWER SYSTEMS ORIGINATE DUE TO VARIED
    OPERATIONS, LIKE, FERRORESONANCE, MAGNETIC SATURATION, SUB
    SYNCHRONOUS RESONANCE, AND NONLINEAR LOADS. HARMONIC
    EMISSION FROM NONLINEAR LOADS PREDOMINATES.
                     EFFECTS OF HARMONICS:
•   INCREASE IN RMS SUPPLY CURRENT
•   POOR POWER FACTOR
•   POOR UTILIZATION OF DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS
•   DERATING OF DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS
•   INCREASED LOSSES
•    CAUSE HEATING
    • IN THE NEUTRAL WIRE
    • IN MOTOR WINDINGS
    • IN TRANSFORMER WINDINGS
•   CAN CAUSE CAPACITOR FAILURE
•   DISTORTION IN VOLTAGE WAVEFORM
• IEEE 519-1992 ESTABLISH RECOMMENDED GUIDELINES FOR HARMONIC
  VOLTAGES ON THE UTILITY DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM AS WELL AS HARMONIC
  CURRENTS WITHIN THE INDUSTRIAL DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM
   COMMON SOURCES OF HARMONICS
• ELECTRICAL LOADS
   • LINEAR
   • NON LINEAR
• ANYTHING THAT DRAWS CURRENT IN A NONLINEAR MANNER
HARMONIC SOURCES FROM COMMERCIAL LOADS
           SINGLE-PHASE POWER SUPPLIES
•   THERE ARE TWO COMMON TYPES OF SINGLE-PHASE POWER SUPPLIES.
•   I) OLDER TECHNOLOGIES USE AC-SIDE VOLTAGE CONTROL METHODS, SUCH AS TRANSFORMERS, TO REDUCE VOLTAGES TO
    THE LEVEL REQUIRED FOR THE DC BUS. THE INDUCTANCE OF THE TRANSFORMER PROVIDES A BENEFICIAL SIDE EFFECT BY
    SMOOTHING THE INPUT CURRENT WAVEFORM, REDUCING HARMONIC CONTENT.
•   II) RECENT-TECHNOLOGY SWITCH-MODE POWER SUPPLIES USE DC-TO-DC CONVERSION TECHNIQUES TO ACHIEVE A
    SMOOTH DC OUTPUT WITH SMALL, LIGHTWEIGHT COMPONENTS.
•   III) PC, PRINTERS, COPIERS AND OTHER SINGLE PHASE ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENTS NOW USES SMPS.
•   IV) ADVANTAGES ARE LIGHT WEIGHT, COMPACT SIZE, EFFICIENCY.
• THE SWITCHED-MODE PROCESS CONVERTS AC TO DC
USING A RECTIFIER BRIDGE, CONVERTS DC BACK TO AC AT A HIGH
 FREQUENCY USING A SWITCHER, STEPS THE AC VOLTAGE DOWN TO
 5 V USING A SMALL TRANSFORMER,
• THE HIGH-FREQUENCY SWITCHING REQUIRES A SMALL AND LIGHT
  TRANSFORMER. HOWEVER, THE PULSED SQUARE WAVE DISTORTS THE
  SINE WAVE AND PRODUCES HARMONICS.
• A DISTINCTIVE CHARACTERISTIC OF
  SWITCH-MODE POWER SUPPLIES IS
  A VERY HIGH THIRD-HARMONIC
  CONTENT IN THE CURRENT. SINCE
  THIRD-HARMONIC CURRENT
  COMPONENTS ARE ADDITIVE IN THE
  NEUTRAL OF A THREE-PHASE
  SYSTEM, THE INCREASING
  APPLICATION OF SWITCH-MODE
  POWER SUPPLIES CAUSES
  CONCERN FOR OVERLOADING OF
  NEUTRAL CONDUCTORS.
FLUORESCENT LIGHTING
• THERE ARE TWO TYPES OF BALLASTS, MAGNETIC AND ELECTRONIC
• A STANDARD MAGNETIC BALLAST IS SIMPLY MADE UP OF AN IRON-CORE
  TRANSFORMER WITH A CAPACITOR ENCASED IN AN INSULATING MATERIAL.
• AN ELECTRONIC BALLAST EMPLOYS A SWITCH-MODE–TYPE POWER SUPPLY TO
  CONVERT THE INCOMING FUNDAMENTAL FREQUENCY VOLTAGE TO A MUCH
  HIGHER FREQUENCY VOLTAGE TYPICALLY IN THE RANGE OF 25 TO 40 KHZ. A
  SMALL INDUCTOR IS SUFFICIENT TO LIMIT THE ARC CURRENT
    ADJUSTABLE SPEED DRIVES FOR HVAC
             AND ELEVATORS
• ADJUSTABLE-SPEED DRIVES SAVE ENERGY BY ADJUSTING THE SPEED OF THE MOTOR TO
  FIT THE LOAD.
• HOWEVER, ASDS CAUSE HARMONICS BY VARYING THE FUNDAMENTAL FREQUENCY IN
  ORDER TO VARY THE SPEED OF THE DRIVE
  WHEN SYSTEM PROBLEMS
         OCCUR
• RED FLAGS FOR WHEN HARMONIC DISTORTION LEVEL MAY BECOME
  TOO HIGH . . .
   •   IF AN ADDITION TO AN EXISTING FACILITY WILL RESULT IN THE NON-LINEAR
       LOAD COMPRISING 25% OR MORE OF THE LOAD.
   •   IF AN ADDITION TO AN EXISTING FACILITY WILL RESULT IN OVER-LOADING THE
       SYSTEM’S CAPACITY.
   •   IF YOU ARE INDISCRIMINATELY ADDING POWER FACTOR CORRECTION
       CAPACITORS WITHOUT CONSIDERING THE AFFECT ON THE SYSTEM AND THE
       PRESENCE OF HARMONIC SOURCES.
  WHEN SYSTEM PROBLEMS
         OCCUR
• RED FLAGS FOR WHEN HARMONIC DISTORTION LEVEL MAY
  BECOME TOO HIGH
   A HISTORY OF ANY OF THE FOLLOWING:
       •   FAILURE OF POWER-FACTOR COMPENSATION CAPACITORS.
       •   OVERHEATING OF CABLES, TRANSFORMERS, OR MOTORS.
       •   MIS-OPERATION OF PROTECTIVE RELAYS OR CONTROL DEVICES.
VOLTAGE DISTORTION IS THE RESULT OF DISTORTED CURRENTS PASSING
THROUGH THE LINEAR, SERIES IMPEDANCE OF THE POWER DELIVERY
SYSTEM,
                    HARMONIC ANALYSIS
• LOCATING HARMONIC SOURCES
• 1. COMPARE THE TIME VARIATIONS OF THE VOLTAGE DISTORTION WITH SPECIFIC
  CUSTOMER AND LOAD CHARACTERISTICS.
• 2. MONITOR FLOW OF HARMONIC CURRENTS ON THE FEEDER WITH CAPACITOR BANKS OFF.
• POWER SYSTEM RESPONSE CHARACTERISTICS
    • 1. THE SYSTEM IMPEDANCE CHARACTERISTICS
    • 2. THE PRESENCE OF A CAPACITOR BANK CAUSING RESONANCE
    • 3. THE AMOUNT OF RESISTIVE LOADS IN THE SYSTEM
    •
  SYSTEM RESPONSE CHARACTERISTICS
• THE POWER SYSTEM RESPONSE CHARACTERISTICS ARE:
• 1. THE SYSTEM IMPEDANCE CHARACTERISTICS
• 2. THE PRESENCE OF A CAPACITOR BANK CAUSING RESONANCE
• 3. THE AMOUNT OF RESISTIVE LOADS IN THE SYSTEM
     SHORT-CIRCUIT CAPACITY OR MVA
• WHERE A NEW CIRCUIT TO BE ADDED TO AN EXISTING BUS IN A
  COMPLEX POWER SYSTEM, SHORT-CIRCUIT CAPACITY OR MVA (OR
  KVA) DATA PROVIDE THE EQUIVALENT IMPEDANCE OF THE POWER
  SYSTEM UP TO THAT BUS. THE THREE-PHASE SHORT-CIRCUIT MVA
  IS DETERMINED FROM
                       SYSTEM IMPEDANCE
• AT THE FUNDAMENTAL FREQUENCY, POWER SYSTEMS ARE PRIMARILY INDUCTIVE, AND THE
  EQUIVALENT IMPEDANCE ARE ALSO CALLED SIMPLY THE SHORT-CIRCUIT REACTANCE . CAPACITIVE
  EFFECTS ARE FREQUENTLY NEGLECTED ON UTILITY DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS AND INDUSTRIAL
  POWER SYSTEMS
• ONE OF THE MOST FREQUENTLY USED QUANTITIES IN THE ANALYSIS OF HARMONICS ON POWER
  SYSTEMS IS THE SHORT-CIRCUIT IMPEDANCE TO THE POINT ON A NETWORK AT WHICH A
  CAPACITOR IS LOCATED.
• IT CAN BE COMPUTED FROM SHORT-CIRCUIT STUDY RESULTS THAT GIVE EITHER THE SHORT-CIRCUIT
  MEGA VOLT AMPERE (MVA) OR THE SHORT-CIRCUIT CURRENT AS FOLLOWS:
• THE INDUCTIVE REACTANCE PORTION OF THE IMPEDANCE CHANGES LINEARLY
  WITH FREQUENCY. THE REACTANCE AT THE HTH HARMONIC IS FOUND FROM THE
  FUNDAMENTAL-IMPEDANCE REACTANCE X1 BY
• XH =H X 1
• FOR LARGER TRANSFORMERS, AT UTILIZATION VOLTAGES, SUCH AS INDUSTRIAL
  POWER SYSTEMS, USING THE TRANSFORMER IMPEDANCE XT AS XSC MAY BE A GOOD
  APPROXIMATION SO THAT
• HERE, IT IS ASSUMED THAT THE TRANSFORMER’S RESISTANCE IS NEGLIGIBLY SMALL
            CAPACITOR IMPEDANCE
• SHUNT CAPACITORS, EITHER AT THE CUSTOMER LOCATION
  FOR POWER FACTOR CORRECTION OR ON THE DISTRIBUTION
  SYSTEM FOR VOLTAGE CONTROL, DRAMATICALLY ALTER THE
  SYSTEM IMPEDANCE VARIATION WITH FREQUENCY.
• CAPACITORS DO NOT CREATE HARMONICS, BUT SEVERE
  HARMONIC DISTORTION CAN SOMETIMES BE ATTRIBUTED TO
  THEIR PRESENCE.
• THE EQUIVALENT LINE-TO-NEUTRAL CAPACITIVE REACTANCE
  AT THE FUNDAMENTAL FREQUENCY OF A CAPACITOR
• BANK IS FOUND FROM
PRACTICAL EXAMPLES OF RESONANCE CIRCUITS
• IT IS CLEAR THAT DURING PARALLEL RESONANCE, A SMALL HARMONIC CURRENT
  CAN CAUSE A LARGE VOLTAGE DROP ACROSS THE APPARENT IMPEDANCE,
• LET US NOW EXAMINE CURRENT BEHAVIOR DURING THE PARALLEL RESONANCE.
• LET THE CURRENT FLOWING IN THE CAPACITOR BANK OR INTO THE POWER SYSTEM BE
  IRESONANCE; THUS
• IT IS CLEAR THAT CURRENTS FLOWING IN THE CAPACITOR BANK AND IN THE POWER SYSTEM (I.E.,
  THROUGH THE TRANSFORMER) WILL ALSO BE MAGNIFIED Q TIMES.
• THIS PHENOMENON WILL LIKELY CAUSE CAPACITOR FAILURE, FUSE BLOWING, OR TRANSFORMER
  OVERHEATING
EFFECTS OF HARMONICS ON THE
         RESONANCE
• A 34.5 KV THREE-PHASE 5.325 MVAR CAPACITOR BANK IS TO BE
  INSTALLED AT A BUS THAT HAS A SHORT-CIRCUIT MVA OF 900 MVA.
  INVESTIGATE THE POSSIBILITY OF HAVING A RESONANCE AND ELIMINATE
  IT. DETERMINE THE FOLLOWING:
• A. THE HARMONIC ORDER OF THE RESONANCE.
• B. THE CAPACITIVE REACTANCE OF THE CAPACITOR BANK IN OHMS.
• C. DESIGN THE CAPACITOR BANK THAT WILL TRAP THE RESULTANT
  HARMONIC BY ADDING A REACTOR IN SERIES WITH THE CAPACITOR. FIND
  THE REQUIRED REACTOR SIZE XL.
• D. THE CHARACTERISTIC REACTANCE.
• E. SELECT THE FILTER QUALITY FACTOR AS 50 AND FIND THE RESISTANCE
  OF THE REACTOR.
• F. THE IMPEDANCE OF THIS RESULTANT SERIES-TUNED FILTER AT ANY
  HARMONIC ORDER H.
        HARMONICS AND SEQUENCE COMPONENTS
• IN A THREE-PHASE BALANCED SYSTEM UNDER NONSINUSOIDAL
  CONDITIONS,THE HTH-ORDER HARMONIC VOLTAGE (OR CURRENT)
  CAN BE EXPRESSED AS
 HARMONIC CURRENTS IN THREE PHASE
            SYSTEMS
• THE PRESENCE OF HARMONIC CURRENTS CAN ALSO LEAD TO SOME
  SPECIAL PROBLEMS IN THREE-PHASE SYSTEMS:
          TRANSFORMER WINDING
• TRANSFORMER WINDING CONNECTIONS HAVE A SIGNIFICANT
  IMPACT ON THE FLOW OF TRIPLEN HARMONIC CURRENTS FROM
  SINGLE-PHASE NONLINEAR LOADS.
• IN THE WYE-DELTA TRANSFORMER (TOP), THE TRIPLEN HARMONIC CURRENTS ARE SHOWN
  ENTERING THE WYE SIDE. SINCE THEY ARE IN PHASE, THEY ADD IN THE NEUTRAL.
• THE DELTA WINDING PROVIDES AMPERE-TURN BALANCE SO THAT THEY CAN FLOW, BUT THEY
  REMAIN TRAPPED IN THE DELTA AND DO NOT SHOW UP IN THE LINE CURRENTS ON THE
  DELTA SIDE.
• THIS TYPE OF TRANSFORMER CONNECTION IS THE MOST COMMON EMPLOYED IN UTILITY
  DISTRIBUTION SUBSTATIONS WITH THE DELTA WINDING CONNECTED TO THE TRANSMISSION
  FEED.
• 1. TRANSFORMERS, PARTICULARLY THE NEUTRAL CONNECTIONS, ARE
  SUSCEPTIBLE TO OVERHEATING WHEN SERVING SINGLE-PHASE
  LOADS ON THE WYE SIDE THAT HAVE HIGH THIRD-HARMONIC
  CONTENT.
• 2. MEASURING THE CURRENT ON THE DELTA SIDE OF A TRANSFORMER
  WILL NOT SHOW THE TRIPLENS AND, THEREFORE, NOT GIVE A TRUE
  IDEA OF THE HEATING THE TRANSFORMER IS BEING SUBJECTED TO.
     SINGLE PHASE NONLINEAR LOAD
                MODEL
• THE MODEL CONSISTS OF 11 KV, 30 MVA, 50 HZ THREE-PHASE
  SOURCE BLOCK FEEDING THROUGH A 11 KV/0.4 KV, 1MVA
  DELTA/WYE TRANSFORMER TO A 1 MW RESISTIVE LOAD, SINGLE-
  PHASE BRIDGE WITH 2,000 ΜF CAPACITIVE FILTER AND 10 Ω
  RESISTIVE LOAD FOR EACH PHASE.
• SIMULATION TIME 0.2 SECOND
THREE-PHASE NONLINEAR LOAD MODEL
• THIS NONLINEAR LOAD MODEL IS USED TO SIMULATE VOLTAGE
  NOTCHES AND HARMONICS.
• THE MODEL CONSISTS OF 11 KV, 30 MVA, 50HZ THREE-PHASE
  SOURCE BLOCK FEEDING THROUGH A 11 KV/0.4 KV, 1MAV
  DELTA/WYE TRANSFORMER TO A 6-PULSE CONTROLLED THREE PHASE
  RECTIFIER CONNECTED TO A 600 V, 10 KW RESISTIVE AND 1 KVA
  INDUCTIVE LOAD. THERE IS A 400 V, 10 KW RESISTIVE LOAD
  CONNECTED IN FRONT OF THE THREE-PHASE RECTIFIER.
HARMONIC INDICES
• APPARENT POWER (S)
• S=VRMSX IRMS
           1               1
• VRMS =     𝑣 I       =     𝐼
            2 1 , MS        2 1
 Root-mean-square (RMS) value of a non sinusoidal waveform, using Fourier series
                               1    2       1
• 𝑣𝑟𝑚𝑠 =    σℎ𝑚𝑎𝑥          (     𝑣 )    =        𝑣12 + 𝑣22 + 𝑣32 … …
             ℎ=1                2 ℎ          2
                                                                       0
• AVERAGE POWER( ACTIVE POWER)
IF V(T) AND I(T) CONTAINS HARMONICS
POWER FACTOR
•
               HARMONIC           INDICES:THD
    HARMONIC DISTORTION LEVELS ARE DESCRIBED BY QUANTITY, THE TOTAL
    HARMONIC DISTORTION (THD), AS A MEASURE OF THE EFFECTIVE VALUE
    OF HARMONIC DISTORTION.
• THD CAN BE CALCULATED FOR EITHER CURRENT OR VOLTAGE.
• IT IS DEFINED AS THE RATIO OF TOTAL HARMONICS IN RMS TO THE
  VALUE AT FUNDAMENTAL RMS FREQUENCY COMPONENT 𝑉     INℎ𝑟𝑚𝑠
                                                         %
                                                      =
                                                            𝑉1𝑟𝑚𝑠
                                                    𝐼ℎ𝑟𝑚𝑠
                                                =
                                                    𝐼1𝑟𝑚𝑠
                 FOURIER ANALYSIS
• THE FRENCH MATHEMATICIAN J. B. J. FOURIER (1758–1830) SHOWED
  THAT ARBITRARY PERIODIC FUNCTIONS COULD BE REPRESENTED BY
  AN INFINITE SERIES OF SINUSOIDS OF HARMONICALLY RELATED
  FREQUENCIES.
                             •                   NO LONGER SINE WAVE
      HARMONIC/ FOURIER ANALYSIS
• ANY PERIODIC FUNCTION CAN BE EXPANDED IN A FOURIER SERIES.
  THE SERIES HAS THE EXPRESSION
             SINGLE-PHASE BRIDGE CIRCUIT
• THE SINGLE-PHASE UNCONTROLLED FULL-BRIDGE RECTIFIER
  CIRCUIT OF FIG. (A) IS FIRST CONSIDERED TO ESTABLISH
  RELATIONS ON THE AC AND DC SIDES AND ORIGIN OF
  HARMONICS. IT IS ASSUMED THAT THERE IS NO VOLTAGE
  DROP OR LEAKAGE CURRENT, THE SWITCHING IS
  INSTANTANEOUS, THE VOLTAGE SOURCE IS SINUSOIDAL,
  AND THE LOAD IS RESISTIVE.
EXAMPLE : A SINGLE-PHASE FULL BRIDGE SUPPLIES A MOTOR LOAD. ASSUMING THAT THE
  MOTOR DC CURRENT IS RIPPLE FREE, DETERMINE THE INPUT CURRENT (USING FOURIER
  ANALYSIS), HARMONIC FACTOR, DISTORTION FACTOR, AND POWER FACTOR FOR AN
                          IGNITION DELAY ANGLE OF 𝛼.
           DEVICES FOR CONTROLLING
             HARMONIC DISTORTION
• FEW OF THE MOST PREVAILING METHODS USED TODAY TO REDUCE HARMONICS ARE
• USE OF REACTORS OR CHOKES
• PASSIVE HARMONIC FILTERS (OR LINE HARMONIC FILTERS)
• 12-PULSE CONVERTER FRONT END
• ACTIVE FILTERS
• USE OF REACTORS OR CHOKES
• USE OF REACTOR IS A SIMPLE AND COST EFFECTIVE METHOD TO REDUCE THE
  HARMONICS PRODUCED BY NONLINEAR LOADS AND IS A BETTER SOLUTION FOR
  HARMONIC REDUCTION.
• REACTORS OR INDUCTORS ARE USUALLY APPLIED TO INDIVIDUAL LOADS SUCH AS
  VARIABLE SPEED DRIVES AND AVAILABLE IN A STANDARD IMPEDANCE RANGES SUCH
  AS 2%, 3%, 5% AND 7.5%.
• WHEN THE CURRENT THROUGH A REACTOR CHANGES, A VOLTAGE IS INDUCED
  ACROSS ITS TERMINALS IN THE OPPOSITE DIRECTION OF THE APPLIED VOLTAGE WHICH
  CONSEQUENTLY OPPOSES THE RATE OF CHANGE OF CURRENT. THIS INDUCED
  VOLTAGE ACROSS THE REACTOR TERMINALS IS REPRESENTED BY EQUATION BELOW.
• E = INDUCED VOLTAGE ACROSS THE REACTOR TERMINALS
• L = INDUCTANCE OF THE REACTOR, IN HENRYS
• DI/DT = RATE OF CHANGE OF CURRENT THROUGH REACTOR IN AMPERE/SECOND
DESIGN OF A SINGLE TUNED FILTER
                SINGLE TUNED FILTER
• THE CAPACITOR VALUE IS CALCULATED BASED ON THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN
  OBSERVED AND DESIRED POWER FACTOR. THE VARIABLES ARE ACTUAL AND
  DESIRED POWER FACTOR AND LOAD POWER TO GET THE CORRECTIVE
  REACTIVE POWER. FROM THIS, USING THE SYSTEM VOLTAGE AND
  FREQUENCY, THE CAPACITANCE OF THE FILTER IS OBTAINED
             DOUBLE TUNED FILTER
• NEGLECTING THE RESISTANCE IN REACTORS AND DIELECTRICS LOSS
  IN CAPACITORS, THE SERIES CIRCUIT IMPEDANCE AND PARALLEL
  CIRCUIT ARE GIVEN RESPECTIVELY AS
SECOND-ORDER DAMPED FILTERS
• IF A SINGLE TUNED FILTER IS TO BE DESIGNED TO ELIMINATE 9TH
  HARMONIC
         1
• 𝑐=           = 114.9𝜇𝐹
       2𝜋𝑓𝑋𝑐
          1
• 𝐿=               = 0.001𝐻
       (2𝜋𝑓ℎ)2 𝐶
• A SINGLE-PHASE THREE BRANCH SHUNT PASSIVE FILTER (PF) (3RD, 5TH,
  AND HIGH PASS FILTER) IS USED IN A SINGLE-PHASE 220 V, 50 HZ
  SYSTEM TO REDUCE THE THD OF SUPPLY CURRENT AND TO IMPROVE
  THE DISPLACEMENT FACTOR TO UNITY. IT HAS A LOAD OF THYRISTOR
  BRIDGE CONVERTER OPERATING AT 45º FIRING ANGLE DRAWING
  CONSTANT 20A DC CURRENT. CALCULATE THE VALUE ELEMENTS OF
  THE PASSIVE FILTER (C3, L3, R3, C5, L5, R5, CH, LH, RH). (CONSIDERED
  QUALITY FACTOR (Q) VALUES FOR SINGLE TUNED PASSIVE FILTER Q =
  20 AND FOR HIGH PASS FILTER Q= 2)
• SOLUTION: GIVEN THAT, SUPPLY VOLTAGE, VS = 220 V RMS, FREQUENCY OF SUPPLY, F = 50 HZ,
  WITH A SOURCE IMPEDANCE OF 5% MAINLY INDUCTIVE FEEDING A NONLINEAR LOAD OF 220 V,
  50 HZ SINGLE-PHASE THYRISTOR BRIDGE CONVERTER WITH CONSTANT DC CURRENT OF 20 A AT
  45º FIRING ANGLE OF ITS THYRISTORS. THE AC LOAD RMS CURRENT IS AS, IL= IDC = 20 A.
• THE FUNDAMENTAL RMS INPUT CURRENT OF THE THYRISTOR BRIDGE CONVERTER IS AS,