DocumentCode :
3046781
Title :
Residential harmonic loads and EV charging
Author :
Bass, Richard ; Harley, Ronald ; Lambert, Frank ; Rajasekaran, Vinod ; Pierce, Jason
Author_Institution :
Nat. Electr. Energy Testing, Res., & Applications Center, Georgia Tech., Atlanta, GA, USA
Volume :
2
fYear :
2001
fDate :
2001
Firstpage :
803
Abstract :
The market penetration of large single-phase residential harmonic loads, including electric vehicle (EV) battery chargers of 6.6 kW, is a potential power quality and power delivery concern for electric power providers and consumers. Charging systems with high harmonic current distortion can potentially result in secondary distribution line and transformer de-rating or quality of service consequences. This paper reports on the main findings of a project that examined the secondary (customer-side) distribution harmonic impacts of residential harmonic loads, with and without EV charging. Simulations as well as actual field test site data, to determine the impact of residential single phase loads and EV charging systems on the secondary of the distribution transformer, show that-commercial EV chargers engineered to National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Working Council (IWC) guidelines based upon IEC 1000-3-4 do not give rise to excessive voltage THD on the secondary of the transformer-the rise in voltage THD due to EV charging is less than 0.8% in all three field test sites and should not be a cause for concern. Load management strategies like off-peak charging should be encouraged to minimize the impacts on the distribution system
Keywords :
battery chargers; electric vehicles; harmonic distortion; load management; power supply quality; power system harmonics; 6.6 kW; EV charging; IEC 1000-3-4; National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Working Council; charging systems; distribution system; electric power providers; electric vehicle battery chargers; excessive voltage THD; high harmonic current distortion; load management strategies; off-peak charging; potential power quality; power delivery; residential harmonic loads; secondary distribution harmonic impacts; secondary distribution line; service consequences; single-phase residential harmonic loads; transformer de-rating; transformer secondary; Automotive engineering; Batteries; Councils; Data engineering; Electric vehicles; Harmonic distortion; Power quality; Power system harmonics; Quality of service; System testing;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Power Engineering Society Winter Meeting, 2001. IEEE
Conference_Location :
Columbus, OH
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-6672-7
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/PESW.2001.916965
Filename :
916965
Link To Document :
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