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Worked Example: Harmonic Analysis & Neutral Conductor Sizing for a 2 MW Data Center — The Nordic Neutral Burnout

Step-by-step harmonic analysis for a data center with non-linear server loads. Covers THD calculation, triplen harmonic neutral current, K-factor transformer derating, IEEE 519 TDD limits, and why a 2019 Nordic data center lost 40% capacity to neutral conductor failure.

IEEE 51920 min readUpdated February 24, 2026
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The Incident: A Neutral Conductor That Should Have Been Twice as Large

In 2019, a major Nordic data center in Norway experienced a catastrophic neutral conductor failure that took 40% of its server capacity offline for three weeks. The insurance claim exceeded €12 million.

The facility housed approximately 800 server racks, each drawing single-phase power through switch-mode power supplies (SMPS). These are classic non-linear loads: they draw current in sharp pulses at the peak of each voltage half-cycle, producing significant harmonic currents — particularly the 3rd harmonic at 150 Hz (on a 50 Hz system).

In a balanced three-phase four-wire system, fundamental currents cancel in the neutral conductor. But triplen harmonics (3rd, 9th, 15th, etc.) are zero-sequence components — they are in phase across all three phases and add arithmetically in the neutral conductor instead of cancelling. With 800 servers each producing 80% 3rd harmonic current, the neutral was carrying 1.73 times the phase current, not the near-zero current the original designer expected.

The neutral conductors, sized equal to the phase conductors per traditional practice, reached temperatures exceeding 180°C. The insulation degraded, the UPS system detected a ground fault and tripped, PDU busbars suffered thermal damage, and connectors melted. The root cause was simple: the designer sized the neutral for linear loads, but the loads were anything but linear.

This scenario is governed by IEEE 519-2022 (harmonic control at the PCC), IEC 61000-3-2 (equipment emission limits), AS/NZS 61000.3.6 (harmonic management in distribution systems), and IEEE C57.110 (transformer K-factor derating).

Scenario: Harmonic Analysis for a 2 MW Data Center

Analyse the harmonic spectrum and size the neutral conductor for a 2 MW data center supplied at 400/230 V three-phase, 50 Hz.

ParameterValue
FacilityTier III data center, 800 server racks
Supply400/230 V three-phase four-wire, 50 Hz, TN-S
Total IT load1,600 kW (800 racks × 2 kW average)
Cooling load400 kW (CRAC units, linear loads)
Transformer2,500 kVA dry-type, Dyn11, 11 kV / 400 V
Load typeSingle-phase SMPS (switch-mode power supplies)
DistributionThree-phase feeders to single-phase PDUs (balanced loading)
PCC11 kV supply point, ISC = 12 kA, IL = 131 A at 11 kV
Primary standardIEEE 519-2022 / IEC 61000-3-2

Step 1: Characterize Load Harmonic Spectrum

Typical server SMPS units with active power factor correction (PFC) have a significantly cleaner spectrum than older passive-PFC supplies. However, at data center scale, even moderate harmonic percentages produce large absolute currents. Measured harmonic spectrum for modern SMPS loads (composite average):

Harmonic Order (h)Frequency (Hz)Ih / I1 (%)Sequence
1 (fundamental)50100Positive / Negative
315080Zero (triplen)
525060Negative
735040Positive
945020Zero (triplen)
1155012Negative
136508Positive
157505Zero (triplen)
Note: Older SMPS without PFC had 3rd harmonic content of 80–90%. Modern active-PFC supplies achieve 30–40% at the individual unit level. However, diversity between units is low (all synchronised to the same AC voltage peak), so aggregate values remain high. The values above represent a conservative worst-case for a mixed-age server fleet.

Step 2: Calculate Total Harmonic Distortion (THD_i)

Total harmonic distortion of current per IEEE 519-2022, Clause 4:

THDi = √(Σ Ih²) / I1 × 100% — (Eq. 1)

THDi = √(80² + 60² + 40² + 20² + 12² + 8² + 5²) / 100

THDi = √(6,400 + 3,600 + 1,600 + 400 + 144 + 64 + 25) / 100

THDi = √12,233 / 100

THDi = 110.6%

This is extremely high. The current waveform is severely distorted, containing more harmonic energy than fundamental energy. This level of THD will cause significant heating in conductors, transformers, and switchgear.

Step 3: Calculate Phase Conductor RMS Current

The true RMS phase current including all harmonics is higher than the fundamental current alone. For the 1,600 kW IT load at 400 V three-phase:

I1 = P / (√3 × V × PF1) — (Eq. 2)

Where PF1 = displacement power factor = 0.98 (SMPS with active PFC):

I1 = 1,600,000 / (√3 × 400 × 0.98) = 1,600,000 / 678.8 = 2,357 A per phase (fundamental)

The RMS current including harmonics:

IRMS = I1 × √(1 + THDi²) — (Eq. 3)

IRMS = 2,357 × √(1 + 1.106²)

IRMS = 2,357 × √(1 + 1.223) = 2,357 × √2.223

IRMS = 2,357 × 1.491 = 3,514 A

The phase conductors must be rated for 3,514 A, not the 2,357 A fundamental current. This is a 49% increase — an additional half again as much copper is needed just for the harmonics.

Step 4: Calculate Neutral Conductor Current (Triplen Harmonics)

In a balanced three-phase four-wire system, the fundamental and non-triplen harmonics cancel in the neutral. Triplen harmonics (3rd, 9th, 15th, etc.) do not cancel — they add in the neutral, multiplied by 3 per IEC 61000-3-2, Annex A.

IN = 3 × √(Σ Ih,triplen²) — (Eq. 4)

Triplen harmonic currents (as absolute values):

I3 = 0.80 × 2,357 = 1,886 A

I9 = 0.20 × 2,357 = 471 A

I15 = 0.05 × 2,357 = 118 A

IN = 3 × √(1,886² + 471² + 118²)

IN = 3 × √(3,557,000 + 221,841 + 13,924)

IN = 3 × √3,792,765

IN = 3 × 1,947 = 5,842 A

The neutral current is 5,842 A — far greater than the phase current of 3,514 A. The ratio:

IN / Iphase = 5,842 / 3,514 = 1.66

This is the killer finding: The neutral conductor carries 166% of the phase current. If the neutral were sized equal to the phase conductors (standard practice for linear loads), it would be overloaded by 66%. At the Norwegian data center, the resulting I²R heating raised the neutral conductor temperature to over 180°C — well beyond the 70°C rating of PVC insulation — causing the catastrophic failure.

Step 5: Calculate K-Factor for Transformer Sizing

The K-factor quantifies the additional eddy-current heating in transformer windings caused by harmonic currents, per IEEE C57.110-2018, Clause 7:

K = Σ (Ih / I1)² × h² — (Eq. 5)

hIh/I1(Ih/I1(Ih/I1)² × h²
11.001.000011.000
30.800.640095.760
50.600.3600259.000
70.400.1600497.840
90.200.0400813.240
110.120.01441211.742
130.080.00641691.082
150.050.00252250.563
K-Factor =30.2

A K-factor of 30.2 is extremely high. Standard transformers are K-1 rated. This facility requires a K-30 rated transformer — specifically designed with oversized neutral bars, reduced eddy-current losses, and often a double-sized neutral winding.

Step 6: Size Neutral Conductor

The neutral conductor must be sized for the calculated neutral current of 5,842 A. Per IEC 60364-5-52, Clause 524.2 and BS 7671 Regulation 524.2.1, the neutral conductor in a three-phase four-wire circuit with significant harmonic content must be at least equal to the phase conductor size, and may need to be larger.

For a neutral current of 5,842 A, the minimum neutral conductor cross-section at 1.5 A/mm² (busbars in switchgear):

AN = IN / J = 5,842 / 1.5 = 3,895 mm² — (Eq. 6)

For the phase conductors carrying 3,514 A:

Aphase = Iphase / J = 3,514 / 1.5 = 2,343 mm²

The neutral conductor must be 1.66 times the phase conductor cross-section.

In practice, this means:

  • Phase busbars: 4 × (100 × 10 mm) copper bars per phase = 4,000 mm²
  • Neutral busbars: 7 × (100 × 10 mm) copper bars = 7,000 mm²
The Norwegian data center had used equal phase and neutral sizing — a practice inherited from linear load installations. The neutral, rated for approximately 3,500 A, was carrying 5,842 A. The I²R losses in the neutral were (5,842/3,500)² = 2.78 times the designed dissipation — nearly three times the designed heat output. The temperature rise was proportional, pushing the conductor from an expected 60°C to over 180°C.

Step 7: Derate Transformer for K-Factor

A standard 2,500 kVA transformer with K-factor of 30.2 must be derated to prevent winding overheating. Per IEEE C57.110-2018, Clause 7.5, the derating factor is:

Derating = 1 / √(1 + e × (K − 1)) — (Eq. 7)

Where e = ratio of eddy current losses to copper losses at rated load. For a typical dry-type transformer, e = 0.08 to 0.12. Using e = 0.10:

Derating = 1 / √(1 + 0.10 × (30.2 − 1))

Derating = 1 / √(1 + 2.92) = 1 / √3.92

Derating = 0.505 (50.5%)

A standard 2,500 kVA transformer can only deliver 2,500 × 0.505 = 1,263 kVA with this harmonic profile. Since the facility requires 2,000 kVA (2,000 kW at 0.98 PF), a standard transformer is severely undersized.

Solution: Specify a K-30 rated transformer at 2,500 kVA, which is designed for this harmonic content without derating. Alternatively, use a standard 5,000 kVA transformer derated to 2,525 kVA — but this is more expensive and occupies more floor space than a purpose-built K-rated unit.

Step 8: Determine IEEE 519 TDD Limits at PCC

The point of common coupling (PCC) is the 11 kV supply point. IEEE 519-2022, Table 2 sets total demand distortion (TDD) limits based on the ratio of short circuit current to maximum demand load current:

ISC / IL = 12,000 / 131 = 91.6 — (Eq. 8)

For ISC/IL between 50 and 100, the IEEE 519-2022, Table 2 limits are:

Harmonic OrderTDD Limit (%)
h < 1110.0%
11 ≤ h < 174.5%
17 ≤ h < 234.0%
TDD (total)12.0%

Reflecting the harmonic currents to the 11 kV PCC through the Dyn11 transformer (which cancels triplen harmonics):

The 3rd, 9th, and 15th harmonics circulate within the delta winding and do not appear at the PCC. The significant harmonics at the PCC are the 5th (60%), 7th (40%), 11th (12%), and 13th (8%).

TDD = √(60² + 40² + 12² + 8²) / 100 = √(3,600 + 1,600 + 144 + 64) / 100

TDD = √5,408 / 100 = 73.5%

This far exceeds the 12% TDD limit. Harmonic filtering is mandatory.

Step 9: Size Harmonic Filter

To reduce TDD from 73.5% to below 12%, an active harmonic filter (AHF) is the most practical solution for data centers because it adapts to changing load profiles as servers are added or removed.

Required harmonic current reduction:

Target TDD = 10% (below 12% limit with margin). Current TDD current at PCC (referred to 11 kV):

Ih,total = IL × TDD / 100 = 131 × 73.5 / 100 = 96.3 A at 11 kV

Target harmonic current:

Ih,target = 131 × 10 / 100 = 13.1 A at 11 kV

Required filter capacity (referred to 400 V LV side):

Ifilter = (96.3 − 13.1) × (11,000 / 400) = 83.2 × 27.5 = 2,288 A at 400 V — (Eq. 9)

Select: 4 × 600 A active harmonic filter modules (total 2,400 A correction capacity), installed in parallel at the main LV switchboard.

Alternatively, a combination of passive 5th/7th tuned filters (for the dominant harmonics) plus a smaller active filter for residual harmonics is more cost-effective:

  • Passive 5th harmonic filter: tuned to 247 Hz, rated 1,200 A at 400 V
  • Passive 7th harmonic filter: tuned to 346 Hz, rated 800 A at 400 V
  • Active filter: 400 A for residual 11th, 13th, and other harmonics

Result Summary

ParameterValueStatus
THDi (current)110.6%Severe distortion
Phase current (RMS)3,514 A (vs 2,357 A fundamental)+49% due to harmonics
Neutral current5,842 A (1.66 × phase)Neutral must be oversized
K-factor30.2K-30 transformer required
Standard transformer derating50.5% (usable: 1,263 kVA of 2,500)Insufficient without K-rating
Neutral conductor sizing7,000 mm² (1.75 × phase at 4,000 mm²)Per IEC 60364-5-52
TDD at PCC (before filter)73.5% (limit: 12%)✗ FAIL without filter
TDD at PCC (after filter)< 10%✓ PASS
Harmonic filter2,400 A active (or passive 5th/7th + active)Mandatory

Key result: the neutral conductor must be at least 166% of the phase conductor cross-section. Sizing the neutral equal to the phase — standard practice for linear loads — guarantees overheating and eventual failure in a data center environment.

What Would Have Prevented This?

The Norwegian data center failure was entirely preventable with proper harmonic analysis during the design phase:

  • Perform harmonic analysis before sizing conductors — per IEC 60364-5-52, Clause 524.2, the neutral conductor in circuits supplying non-linear loads must be sized for the actual neutral current, which can exceed the phase current when triplen harmonics are present
  • Specify K-rated transformers — per IEEE C57.110, transformers supplying non-linear loads must be either K-rated for the expected harmonic content or derated; a K-1 transformer at full load with K-30 harmonics will overheat its windings
  • Install harmonic monitoring — per IEEE 519, Clause 8, continuous power quality monitoring at the PCC detects harmonic levels before they cause damage; the Norwegian facility had no harmonic monitoring
  • Use double-neutral busbars in PDUs — data center power distribution units should have neutral busbars rated at 200% of phase rating as standard practice; this is now specified in BICSI 002-2019 for data center design
  • Design for the load you have, not the load you wish you had — non-linear loads are now the majority of electrical loads in commercial buildings, not the exception; the assumption of balanced linear loads is increasingly dangerous

A €50,000 harmonic study during design would have identified every one of these issues. The €12 million insurance claim was the price of skipping it.

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Frequently Asked Questions

In a three-phase system, the three phases are displaced by 120 degrees. For the fundamental (50 Hz) and most harmonics, the currents in the three phases sum to zero at any instant — they cancel in the neutral. But the 3rd harmonic (150 Hz) completes exactly 3 cycles for every 1 cycle of the fundamental. At 120 degrees phase displacement, 3 × 120 = 360 degrees — a complete cycle — so all three 3rd harmonic currents are perfectly in phase. Instead of cancelling, they add: the neutral carries 3 times the per-phase 3rd harmonic current. The same applies to the 9th (3 × 3), 15th (3 × 5), and all triplen harmonics.
The K-factor is a weighting of a load's harmonic spectrum that predicts the additional eddy-current heating in transformer windings. It is calculated as the sum of (Ih/I1)² × h² for all harmonic orders. A purely sinusoidal load has K = 1. A load with high harmonics might have K = 13, 20, or even 30+. Standard transformers are K-1 rated. A K-13 transformer has oversized conductors, reduced flux density, and double-sized neutral terminals to handle 13 times the normal eddy-current heating. Using a K-1 transformer with a K-30 load will overheat the windings, accelerate insulation aging, and can cause premature failure within months.
No. Perfect phase balancing helps cancel the fundamental and non-triplen harmonics in the neutral, but it makes the triplen harmonic problem worse, not better. With perfectly balanced single-phase non-linear loads, the 3rd harmonic currents from each phase are exactly equal and perfectly in phase — they add with maximum efficiency in the neutral. Phase imbalance actually introduces some cancellation of triplens. The only ways to reduce triplen harmonic current in the neutral are: (1) use loads with lower harmonic emissions (e.g., active PFC power supplies), (2) install harmonic filters, or (3) use a delta-wye transformer to trap triplens in the delta winding.

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