Use simultaneous-sampling ADCs to monitor three phase ac-line power

MULTICHANNEL SIMULTANEOUS-SAMPLING ADCs (ANALOGUE-TODIGITAL CONVERTERS) TRIM YOUR COSTS WHILE SIMPLIFYING POWER-MONITORING SYSTEMS.

BY MARTIN MASON • MAXIM INTEGRATED PRODUCTS -- EDN Europe, 01 Jan 2010

Advanced power-line-monitoring systems combine power-supply monitoring, load-balancing, protection, and metering functions. This allows power utilities to efficiently deliver grid power while helping consumers control costs. An advanced power-line-monitoring system can perform predictive maintenance while detecting and responding to fault conditions. It will allow dynamic load balancing—yielding energy conservation—while monitoring and controlling power-delivery quality and protecting the equipment.

To implement these power-line systems you need to monitor the voltage and current on multiple phases with ADCs (analogue-to-digital converters). However, you must synchronise these converters to be able to meet the stringent standards requirements and to accurately measure power factor. By synchronising the conversions, you ensure that they sample the three phases and neutral at the same moment. Synchronising individual converters can be tricky, so various vendors offer simultaneous-sampling ADCs in a single package. If a highly integrated solution is needed, you could also include the simultaneous-sampling converters in a custom ASIC.

Varying international standards on the precision of energy measurement complicate the development and widespread adoption of advanced power-line-monitoring systems. Real-time power-delivery monitoring, fault detection, fault protection, and dynamic load balancing require stringent accuracy. As an example, the EU (European Union) standard IEC62053 Class 0.2, which authorities worldwide are increasingly using as a common standard worldwide, requires meter precision to be 0.2% of nominal current and voltage. For powerfactor- measurement accuracy, your sample-time phase matching should be 0.1% or better.

These international and local standards also dictate the sample rate that you need. These applications typically require accurate simultaneous multichannel measurement over a wide dynamic range of up to 90 dB with a sample rate of 16 ksps or higher. This provides for analysis of multiple harmonics of the ac supply as well as detection of high-speed fault conditions, such as spikes and brownouts.

You should also look at factors such as effective ZIN (input impedance), signal-phase adjustment, and small physical package size when selecting the ADCs for a power-grid-monitoring application. Lately, designers are turning toward simultaneous- sampling, multichannel, high-performance ADCs for their power-line monitoring or multichannel SCADA (supervisory control- and-data-acquisition) systems.

A POWER-GRID-MONITORING APPLICATION

Power companies distribute three-phase power using a wye connection. The term “wye” refers to the arrangement of three transformer windings that join at a common point, the junction of the Y. The line voltages are offset in phase from each other by 120°, one-third of a cycle. If loads on each of the three phases are equal, the system is balanced and no current flows through the neutral line. A fourth, neutral, wire connects to the junction of the wye. It will accommodate imbalanced loads across the line connections. In a typical power-grid-monitoring scheme, you measure each phase’s power measurements with a CT (current transformer) and a voltage transformer (Figure 1). The latter is a PT (potential transformer) in power-distribution nomenclature. The complete system comprises four such pairs: one pair for each of the three phases plus a neutral pair. The ADCs simultaneously measure the three phases and neutral voltages and currents. You can determine the active, reactive, apparent-energy, and power-factor parameters by performing digital processing on the sampled data. You could then adjust line loads dynamically to correct for power factor, thereby increasing power efficiency. By executing an FFT (fast Fourier transform) on the sampled data, you can carry out frequency and harmonicdistortion metering, as well as highlight information such as system losses and the effects of unwanted noise.

POWER-MONITORING SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS

To accommodate standards requirements, your powermonitoring equipment must measure instantaneous current and voltage values with sample rates of up to 60 Hzx256 samples, or greater than 15,360 sps (samples per second).

You can calculate the ADC’s dynamic range for a voltage measurement from the maximum and nominal voltages that you monitor and from the required accuracy for power measurements. For example, if a design must measure a 1.5-kV temporary overvoltage—under a fault condition— with a nominal 220V voltage measurement and a 0.2% specification-accuracy requirement, then the total dynamic range of the voltage-measurement subsystem will need to be 20 log((1500/220)x2000)=83 dB.

In all the calculations, the assumed required design accuracy is 0.05%, which is better than the standard’s 0.2% accuracy requirements. You should use this design margin to ensure compliance with the standard.

Current-sensing requirements also affect ADC specifications. If the design requirements for power monitoring are the typical 10A nominal and 100A maximum, and Class 0.2 (0.2%)-accurate, then the total dynamic range of the current-measurement subsystem will need to be 20 log((100/10)x2000)=86 dB.

A 16-bit-resolution ADC will achieve this 86-dB dynamic range. To ensure accurate current and voltage measurements, the ADC must be capable of sampling up to eight channels simultaneously: four voltage and four current. You should provide for the ability to correct the current- and voltagetransformer- induced phase shift for systems that are trying to measure and correct power factor.

LOCAL AND INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS

The measurement characteristics of delivered energy must comply with local standards or international requirements. Documents such as the EU standards EN 50160, IEC62053, and IEC61850 dictate both the minimum accuracy and the sample rate necessary for a modern multichannel ADC system in power-system monitoring and metering. Many countries around the globe have adopted versions of the EU standards, so they serve as a good example of what measurement requirements the system must meet (Table 1).

Another EU standard, IEC62053, mandates the precision of energy-metering equipment. It defines four classes of meters: Class 2, Class 1, Class 0.5, and Class 0.2. For accurate powerfactor measurement, you should phase-match to 0.1% or better. For the harmonic voltage, the EN 50160 mandates measurement up to the 25th-order harmonic of 50/60-Hz voltages. For various nonlinear loads such as inductive motors and switching-power-supply drives, you must do your measurements to the 127th-order harmonic of 50/60-Hz voltages. Emerging standards such as IEC61850 recommend the recording of power-system transient events with 256 samples per ac cycle or higher.

ADC ALTERNATIVES

Several ADCs are able to meet the rigorous standards of these power-grid monitoring applications. A majority of these are six-channel, 16-bit simultaneous-sampling ADCs with sample rates of up to 250 ksps. Analog Devices and Linear Technology both offer six low-power 250-ksps SAR (successive-approximation- register) ADCs in a single package: the 16-bit AD7656 ADC and the 14-bit LTC2351-14 SAR ADC. Maxim offers the MAX11046 high-precision data converter, which provides eight low-power, 16-bit, simultaneous-sampling, 250-ksps SAR ADCs in a single package while achieving a signal-to-noise ratio of greater than 90 dB. You may also need to consider attributes such as ZIN and signal-phase adjustment.

ZIN depends on the input capacitance and sampling frequency: ZIN=1/(CINxFSAMPLE), where FSAMPLE is the sampling frequency and a typical CIN is 15 pF. If the ADC has a high ZIN, such as the MAX11046 and AD7656, you can directly interface it with voltage- and current-measurement transformers. This eliminates external precision instrumentation amplifiers, or buffers, saving system cost, board area, and power (Figure 2).

As the transformer converts a high voltage to a lower voltage, a phase shift occurs in the output. To deal with this, designers may adjust the phase in software, or they can realign the signals inside the ADC. When you de-skew the voltage and current signals, it allows for true and accurate measurement of the power factor in the wye configuration. Traditionally, you would do signal-phase adjustment digitally, as a postprocessing step on the ADC data. The AD7656 and MAX11046 ADC converters handle phase adjustment in this manner. You will incur a continuous software overhead with these types of ADCs.

Some ADCs offer input-phase adjustments of 0 to 333 µs, with the delay independently settable per channel in 1.33-µs steps. This eliminates the software overhead. The 24-bit, fourchannel MAX11040 sigma-delta ADC provides this capability. Each channel includes an adjustable sampling phase that permits internal compensation for phase shift due to external transformers or filters at the inputs. An active-low SYNC input allows periodic alignment of the conversion timing for up to eight devices with a remote timing source. IC package size matters in many power-grid-monitoring applications. The MAX11040 sigma-delta ADC uses 15.9 mm2 per channel, less than 50% the area of the ADS1274.

In addition to keeping the systems small, designers must also be concerned about preventing system failures due to overloads or other line disturbances. For example, some ADC devices have built-in overvoltage protection through the use of clamp diodes and an internal logic circuit that sets a fault bit if high voltage is detected. Other ADCs use external diode protection, increasing board area.

CONCLUSION

Rising worldwide power demands are driving rapid investment in the power-delivery infrastructure, or “smart grid”. You can efficiently monitor, deliver, and control grid power by integrating power-supply-monitoring, dynamic- load-balancing, protection, and metering functions in your advanced power-line systems. Complicating the development and widespread adoption of these systems are the varying standards and requirements regarding the precision and frequency of energy measurement. Stringent specifications such as the EN50160, IEC62053, and IEC61850 standards dictate both the minimum accuracy and sample rate necessary for a modern, multichannel ADC system.

Today’s simultaneous-sampling ADCs are a natural choice for designs that need to provide high performance while reducing total system cost and minimising board area. In addition to sample rates and standard requirements, other factors—such as ZIN, signal-phase adjustment and small physical package size—are playing a critical role in your ADC selection for a power-grid-monitoring application.

Author Information
Martin Mason is the director for precision ADCs and filters at Maxim Integrated Products, located in Sunnyvale, California. He can be reached at martin.mason@maxim-ic.com.

 

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