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Power QualityAlso: third harmonic neutral, N conductor current, triplen harmonics

Neutral Current in 3-Phase Systems

In a balanced three-phase system the neutral current is theoretically zero, but triplen harmonics from non-linear loads cause substantial neutral currents that may exceed phase currents. IEC 60364-5-52 Clause 524 addresses neutral conductor sizing for circuits supplying harmonic-generating equipment, requiring neutral conductors sized to carry the expected harmonic currents safely.

Detailed Explanation

Traditional electrical design assumes that in a balanced three-phase four-wire system, the neutral conductor carries only the imbalance current — which for well-balanced loads is small. However, modern non-linear loads generate triplen harmonics (3rd, 9th, 15th, etc.) that are zero-sequence components: instead of cancelling in the neutral as the fundamental and other harmonics do, they add arithmetically. In an office building with many computers and LED lighting, the neutral current can reach 1.5 to 1.7 times the phase current due to third harmonic addition. This creates two problems: the neutral conductor may overheat if sized only for fundamental-frequency imbalance, and the additional neutral current increases the magnetic field and losses in the supply transformer. IEC 60364-5-52 Clause 524.2 states that where the third harmonic content of phase current exceeds 33%, the neutral conductor must be sized based on the neutral current rather than the phase current, and the grouping factor should be applied to the neutral as if it were a loaded conductor. This often means the neutral must be the same size as or larger than the phase conductors, reversing the traditional practice of reducing neutral size.

Standard References

StandardClause
IEC 60364-5-52Clause 524
BS 7671:2018Regulation 523.6

Related Terms