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Investigation of severity of voltage flicker caused by second harmonic
Author(s) -
Goh Zai Peng,
Radzi Mohd Amran Mohd,
Hizam Hashim,
Abdul Wahab Noor Izzri
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
iet science, measurement and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.418
H-Index - 49
eISSN - 1751-8830
pISSN - 1751-8822
DOI - 10.1049/iet-smt.2016.0369
Subject(s) - flicker , harmonic , waveform , filter (signal processing) , voltage , thd analyzer , total harmonic distortion , signal (programming language) , low pass filter , harmonic analysis , acoustics , control theory (sociology) , electronic engineering , mathematics , physics , engineering , computer science , electrical engineering , intermodulation , amplifier , control (management) , cmos , artificial intelligence , programming language
Second harmonic produces asymmetrical waveform which leads to fluctuation of root‐means‐square (rms) value with certain frequency. Meanwhile, function of weighting filter in flickermeter is designed for sixth‐order low‐pass filtering function with frequency to be limited to 35 Hz, signal with frequency ranging from 35 to 100 Hz, at certain gain, still can pass through. Since the second harmonic produces fluctuation of rms value with 50 Hz, there is high possibility that it can be passed by this filter and thus resulting in flicker detection. Therefore, this study points out a worthwhile research gap to justify that the presence of the second harmonic can directly increase severity of voltage flicker. In addition, further simulation work using semi‐converter has been carried out, as one of main even harmonic sources, in order to justify the concept. To practically validate the concept, Fluke power analyser 435 series II and programmable alternative current source are utilised in the experimental setup. In the main finding, it is confirmed that severity of the voltage flicker increases directly with the presence of the second harmonic and it also formed a clear relationship between short‐term perceptibility (Pst) and percentage of the second harmonic component.

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