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12/26/2019 Bad Power Factor? - A reason to oversize your inverter - Sunny.

The SMA Corporate Blog

Bad Power Factor? – A


reason to oversize your
inverter
by Scott Partlin, 3. Jan. 2018, 13 Comments

In a previous blog, we discussed some good reasons to oversize your PV array.


In this blog we will discuss how, by oversizing your inverter, you can correct a
site’s poor power factor.

Electricity used in our homes and businesses is (almost always) alternating current. Put
simply, voltage and current that are transmitted throughout the electric power grid in a
sinusoidal waveform averaging 0. When these current and voltage waveforms are
perfectly synchronised in time, they have a power factor of 1 or pure active power.

Example of pure active power (left) with current and voltage perfectly in-phase, and of
pure reactive power (right) with current and voltage perfectly out-of-phase.

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When we consume electricity (in pumps, fridges, lights, etc) current and voltage
waveforms can go out of alignment. This will lead to a power factor ≠ 1. As a site’s
power factor moves further away from 1, they will typically incur increased grid quality
supply charges from their electricity provider. This is where your SMA inverter can begin
to help save you even more money. By utilising SMA inverter’s built in grid support
functionality, you can correct a bad power factor by feeding reactive power as well as
active power and hence reduce the grid quality charge component of your electricity bill.
This can often be cheaper than using additional power factor correction equipment such
a capacitor banks. Often active power is just as valuable to a site as reactive power for
correcting power factor. This creates a financial driver to oversize your inverter.

How much should I oversize my inverter?


Since this is an abstract concept for a lot of system designers and installers, let’s work
through an example.

First, we need to understand the relationship between ACTIVE, REACTIVE and


APPARENT power. Apparent power consist of active and reactive power, two different
types of power existing only in its pure nature. Because active and reactive power don’t
have a relationship, it is impossible to convert one power type to the other. A graphical
model of such relationship is a cartesian coordinate system with active power for the x-
axis and reactive power in the y-axis. These 3 power types are related together
according to Pythagoras’ theorem as shown in the following diagram.

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Relationship between Apparent, Active and Reactive power.

Now let’s assume we have a site which is consuming 80kW of active power with a site
power factor of 0.85 due to some inductive loads such as pumps and motors. This
would result in the following relationship:

Power consumption without power factor correction or generation

Now let’s assume the site needs to correct its power factor back to 0.90, and they also
want to reduce their active power consumption by ~60%. If we begin with a 60kW solar
system (60kW PV array, 60kW inverter), and this system generated power with a cos(φ)
of 1.0, we would have the following power consumption. We can see that if we did
nothing to the way the solar system operated, it could actually make the site’s power
factor (and hence power quality charges) significantly worse from the utility’s point of
view.
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Power consumption with Generation at cosphi 1.0

Now let’s operate the solar system with a cos (φ) of 0.82 to try and correct the site’s
power factor. We would have the following power consumption and generation
relationships:

Power consumption with generation at cosphi 0.82

This would then have the resultant power consumption for the site according to the
following:

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Resultant power consumption with inverters correcting power factor

We could then consider to implement a cos(φ) function similar to the following could
help to ensure that as the solar system increases its output power, it will change its
cos(φ) to compensate for site power factor.

Dynamic cosphi function to assist correcting a poor site power factor

In this example, we require 60kVA of inverter capacity, but only 49kW of active power
generation, meaning we can oversize our inverters by about 20% compared to the size
of our PV array. SMA inverters can generate reactive power without using any active
power. Within SMA, were refer to this capability as Q @ Night ( read more about Q @
Night here).

Conclusion
By oversizing inverters, you have reserve reactive power capacity which can be utilised
without sacrificing active power generation. Utilising the built-in grid support functionality
in SMA inverters, such as a dynamic cos(φ) function, can help to improve a site’s power

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factor and in turn help to reduce grid quality supply charges a customer might incur from
their electricity provider.

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