Worked Example: Sizing a Power Factor Correction Capacitor Bank for an Industrial Site
Step-by-step calculation for sizing a power factor correction capacitor bank to improve power factor from 0.72 to 0.95 lagging at a 500 kVA industrial site. Covers reactive power calculation, capacitor bank selection, cable sizing, fuse rating, and harmonic considerations.
Project Description
An industrial manufacturing facility is experiencing power factor penalties from their electricity retailer. The measured power factor is 0.72 lagging, well below the target of 0.95 lagging typically required to avoid penalty charges. This worked example sizes a capacitor bank to correct the power factor, then determines the cable and fuse ratings for the capacitor bank connection.
Poor power factor increases apparent power (kVA) drawn from the supply, resulting in higher current for the same real power output. This wastes transformer and cable capacity, increases losses, and triggers utility penalty charges — typically 1–3% of the electricity bill per 0.01 below the target power factor.
Given Data
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Supply voltage | 400 V, three-phase, 50 Hz |
| Maximum demand | 500 kVA (measured) |
| Existing power factor | 0.72 lagging |
| Target power factor | 0.95 lagging |
| Cable from MDB to PFC panel | 15 m (short run) |
| Installation method | Multicore on cable tray, 3 grouped circuits |
| Cable type | XLPE 90°C copper |
| Ambient temperature | 35°C |
| Harmonic content | THDv < 5% (linear loads dominate) |
Step 1: Calculate Real Power (kW)
The real (active) power drawn by the facility:
P = S × cosφ1 — (Eq. 1)
Where:
S = 500 kVA (apparent power)
cosφ1 = 0.72 (existing power factor)
P = 500 × 0.72
P = 360 kW
This real power remains constant — the loads still consume 360 kW regardless of power factor correction. Only the reactive component changes.
Step 2: Calculate Existing and Target Reactive Power
Calculate the reactive power at the existing and target power factors:
Existing reactive power:
Q1 = P × tanφ1 — (Eq. 2)
φ1 = arccos(0.72) = 43.95°
tanφ1 = tan(43.95°) = 0.9640
Q1 = 360 × 0.9640
Q1 = 347.0 kVAr
Target reactive power:
Q2 = P × tanφ2 — (Eq. 3)
φ2 = arccos(0.95) = 18.19°
tanφ2 = tan(18.19°) = 0.3287
Q2 = 360 × 0.3287
Q2 = 118.3 kVAr
Step 3: Determine Required Capacitor Bank Rating
The required capacitor bank must supply the difference between the existing and target reactive power:
Qc = Q1 − Q2 — (Eq. 4)
Qc = 347.0 − 118.3
Qc = 228.7 kVAr
Select the next standard capacitor bank size. Standard ratings are typically available in 25, 50, 75, 100, 125, 150, 200, 250, 300 kVAr increments. For automatic stepped banks, common step sizes are 12.5, 25, or 50 kVAr per step.
Selected capacitor bank: 225 kVAr (automatic, 9 × 25 kVAr steps)
Verify achieved power factor with 225 kVAr:
Qcorrected = Q1 − Qc(actual) = 347.0 − 225 = 122.0 kVAr
Scorrected = √(P² + Qcorrected²)
Scorrected = √(360² + 122²)
Scorrected = √(129,600 + 14,884)
Scorrected = √144,484
Scorrected = 380.1 kVA
PFcorrected = P / Scorrected = 360 / 380.1 = 0.947
0.947 ≈ 0.95 ✓ (close enough to target)
Step 4: Calculate Capacitor Bank Current
The full-load current drawn by the capacitor bank at rated output:
Ic = Qc / (√3 × V) — (Eq. 5)
Ic = 225,000 / (√3 × 400)
Ic = 225,000 / 692.8
Ic = 324.8 A
This is the steady-state capacitor current. However, capacitors experience transient inrush currents during switching that can reach 20–200 times the rated current for a few milliseconds. The cable and fuse must be rated for the steady-state current with an overrating factor.
Step 5: Size the Protective Device (Fuse)
Per IEC 61439-1 and capacitor manufacturer recommendations, the protective device for a capacitor bank must be rated at 1.36 to 1.50 times the capacitor rated current to account for:
- Capacitor tolerance (+5% to +15% capacitance per IEC 60831)
- Harmonic currents (even with low THD)
- Voltage variations (+10%)
Minimum fuse rating:
Ifuse = 1.43 × Ic — (Eq. 6, using 1.43 as mid-range factor)
Ifuse = 1.43 × 324.8
Ifuse = 464.5 A
Select next standard fuse rating: 500 A gG (general purpose HRC fuse)
Verify: 500 A ≥ 464.5 A ✓
Step 6: Size the Cable
The cable must carry the overrated current continuously. Per AS/NZS 3008.1.1:2017 and IEC 60364-5-52, the cable current-carrying capacity after derating must be at least equal to the fuse rating:
Required cable capacity:
Iz ≥ Ifuse / (k1 × k2) — (Eq. 7)
Derating factors:
k1 (ambient 35°C, 90°C XLPE cable):
Reference ambient = 30°C (IEC 60364)
From IEC 60364-5-52 Table B.52.14: k1 = 0.96
k2 (3 grouped circuits on tray):
From IEC 60364-5-52 Table B.52.17: k2 = 0.82
ktotal = 0.96 × 0.82 = 0.787
Iz ≥ 500 / 0.787
Iz ≥ 635.3 A
From IEC 60364-5-52, Table B.52.2 for multicore XLPE copper on perforated tray (Installation Method E):
| Cable Size (mm²) | Current Rating (A) | Result |
|---|---|---|
| 120 | 539 | ✗ Too low |
| 150 | 607 | ✗ Too low |
| 185 | 679 | ✓ Passes (679 ≥ 635.3) |
| 240 | 773 | ✓ Passes with margin |
Selected cable: 185 mm² XLPE copper, rated 679 A
Verify: 679 A × 0.787 = 534.4 A > 500 A (fuse rating) ✓
Wait — 534.4 A > 500 A, so the cable is protected by the fuse ✓
Also verify the derated capacity exceeds the actual capacitor current:
534.4 A > 324.8 A (capacitor rated current) ✓
Step 7: Verify Voltage Drop
For completeness, check the voltage drop on the 15 m cable run. For capacitive loads the reactive voltage drop component actually raises the voltage, but we conservatively check the resistive component:
From cable data, 185 mm² XLPE copper:
mV/A·m (resistive) = 0.210
ΔV = mV/A·m × Ic × L / 1000 — (Eq. 8)
ΔV = 0.210 × 324.8 × 15 / 1000
ΔV = 1.023 V
ΔV% = 1.023 / 400 × 100 = 0.26%
The voltage drop of 0.26% is negligible for a 15 m run. This is not a governing factor.
Result Summary
| Parameter | Before Correction | After Correction |
|---|---|---|
| Power factor | 0.72 lagging | 0.947 lagging |
| Apparent power (kVA) | 500 kVA | 380.1 kVA |
| Reactive power (kVAr) | 347.0 kVAr | 122.0 kVAr |
| Real power (kW) | 360 kW | 360 kW (unchanged) |
| Supply current | 722 A | 549 A (−24%) |
| Equipment Selection | Value |
|---|---|
| Capacitor bank | 225 kVAr automatic stepped (9 × 25 kVAr) |
| Fuse | 500 A gG HRC fuse |
| Cable | 185 mm² XLPE copper (multicore on tray) |
| Voltage drop (15 m) | 0.26% ✓ PASS |
The 225 kVAr automatic capacitor bank corrects the power factor from 0.72 to 0.947, freeing 120 kVA of transformer capacity and reducing supply current by 24%. The annual savings from avoided penalty charges and reduced losses typically pay back the capacitor bank installation cost within 12–18 months.
Key References
- IEC 61439-1 — Low-voltage switchgear and controlgear assemblies, general rules
- IEC 60831-1 — Shunt power capacitors for AC power systems ≤ 1 kV, tolerances and ratings
- AS/NZS 3000:2018, Clause 4.7 — Requirements for capacitor installations
- IEC 60364-5-52, Tables B.52.2, B.52.14, B.52.17 — Cable current ratings and derating factors
- AS/NZS 3008.1.1:2017 — Cable sizing and current-carrying capacities
- Schneider Electric Guide, Chapter K — Power factor correction design methodology
Try It Yourself
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