Symmetrical Components
Symmetrical components is a mathematical technique that decomposes unbalanced three-phase voltages and currents into three balanced sets: positive sequence, negative sequence, and zero sequence. IEC 60909-0 Clause 7 applies this method for calculating unbalanced fault currents. The technique simplifies analysis of asymmetrical faults by allowing each sequence network to be solved independently.
Detailed Explanation
Developed by Charles Fortescue in 1918, symmetrical components transform the complex problem of unbalanced three-phase analysis into three independent single-phase calculations. The positive-sequence component represents the normal balanced three-phase system rotating in the forward direction. The negative-sequence component represents a balanced system rotating in the reverse direction — it appears during unbalanced faults and causes heating in motors. The zero-sequence component represents in-phase currents in all three phases simultaneously — it flows in earth faults and returns through the neutral or earth path. For symmetrical (three-phase) faults, only the positive-sequence network is needed. For single-phase-to-earth faults (the most common type), all three sequence networks are connected in series. For phase-to-phase faults, positive and negative sequence networks are connected in parallel. The zero-sequence impedance is significantly different from positive-sequence impedance for transformers (depending on winding configuration — delta, star, zigzag) and cables (depending on sheath earthing). IEC 60909-0 uses symmetrical components extensively for calculating various fault types and provides rules for determining sequence impedances of system components. Understanding symmetrical components is essential for protection engineers designing earth fault and negative-sequence protection schemes.
Standard References
| Standard | Clause | Relevance |
|---|---|---|
| IEC 60909-0 | Clause 7 | Use of symmetrical components for unbalanced fault calculations |
| IEEE C37.010 | Clause 5 | Application of symmetrical components in fault analysis |
Related Terms
Short-Circuit Current
Short-circuit current is the abnormally high current that flows when a low-impedance fault path forms between live condu...
Prospective Fault Current
Prospective fault current is the maximum current that would flow at a given point in an electrical installation if a sho...
Fault Loop Impedance Zs
Fault loop impedance Zs is the measured or calculated total impedance of the earth fault current path from the supply tr...
Earth Fault Loop Impedance
Earth fault loop impedance is the total impedance of the fault current path from the source through the phase conductor,...