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EE4503 Electrical Systems Design

EE4503 Electrical Systems Design. Branch circuit and Feeder (Lighting and Appliances). Topics. Characteristics of Loads Circuits Design Branch Circuit Feeder Circuit Load Schedule. Characteristics of Loads. Continuous Load

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EE4503 Electrical Systems Design

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  1. EE4503Electrical Systems Design Branch circuit and Feeder (Lighting and Appliances)

  2. Topics • Characteristics of Loads • Circuits Design • Branch Circuit • Feeder Circuit • Load Schedule

  3. Characteristics of Loads • Continuous Load • More than 3 hrs. of continuous usage e.g. lighting, air condition • Non-continuous Load: • Less than 3 hrs. of continuous usage e.g. electric oven, microwave When not sure, add 25% more

  4. Characteristics of LoadsDefinition • Total Connected Load: total kVA or MVA listed • Maximum Demand: the maximum kVA or MVA used at the same time

  5. Characteristics of LoadsDefinition • Demand Factor (D.F.): ratio of “Maximum Demand” to “Total Connected Load” () • Diversity Factor: summation of every branched circuits’ maximum demand to the system’s maximum demand (always greater than or equal to 1.0)

  6. Characteristics of LoadsDefinition • Peak Load (P): the maximum kVA or MVA at the given periond (e.g. 15 min) • Load Factor (L.F.): ratio of “Average Load” to the “Peak Load” (). is total energy for period of time

  7. Characteristics of LoadsCommon Load • Lighting: about 20-50% of total load or 20-100VA/m2 • Receptacle: if no specific information, 180-200VA/set (1, 2 or 3 outlets) • HVAC: 1TR (12,000 BTU) is about 1.5-1.8kVA • Motor • Escalator: manufacturer’s specification

  8. GroundingCommon Load - Lighting http://www.g-w.com/pdf/sampchap/9781605255880_ch12.pdf

  9. GroundingCommon Load - Escalator http://www.elevatorbooks.com/Content/Site108/ProductContent/April2012Articl_00000012203.pdf

  10. Circuit Design • Branch Circuit • Feeder Circuit • Main Circuit

  11. Branch Circuit • Connect from a distribution panel to load or receptacle • Lighting or Appliance Branch Circuit • Lighting Branch Circuit • Receptacle Branch Circuit • Lighting & Receptacle Branch Circuit • Individual Branch Circuit

  12. Branch CircuitCalculation • Load of a branch circuit (BC) at least the total load connected to that branch. • Conductor Sizing  Current Rating of CB • Current Rating of CB Maximum Load • Size of a BC goes by the current rating of CB: 15(16)A, 20A, 25A, 30(32)A, 40A, 50A, 63A

  13. Branch CircuitDesign Procedure • Find “Load” • Calculate “Circuit Breaker” (% of BC) • Calculate “Cable” • Verify “Voltage Drop”: 1-2% of rated voltage ?? safety factor ??

  14. Branch CircuitDesign Recommendations • Lighting Circuit: continuous load • 50-70% of BC (no more than 80%) or allowance of 10-30% • Individual Branch Circuit: load is known • Should be no more than 80% of BC

  15. Branch CircuitDesign Recommendations • Receptacles Circuit: single, duplex, triplex • 180VA per set (200VA for ease) • Individual Circuit with ELCB: heater, Jacuzzi • Receptacles Circuit with ELCB: toilet, kitchen, basement, outdoor, < 1.5m from water ?? Some recommendations can be relaxed ??

  16. Branch CircuitDesign Recommendations • Separate the type of load: lighting on one BC • Future Load: • 20% spare at least • 40% if continuous load • Cable size is no smaller than 2.5mm2 • BC for receptacles contains less than 10 sets

  17. Branch CircuitDrawing • # of hash marks is # of cables • No hash mark means 2 cables • One hash mark + number is the number of cables • Arrow + Lx is connected to circuit breaker (phase) #x

  18. Branch CircuitPanelboard • No more than 42 circuit • No longer than 50 m • Easy to access (no higher than 1.8m) • Rated is more than the rated of the cable • At least one panel board per floor • Must have protection equipment (CB)

  19. Branch CircuitPanelboard • Should be in the center: balance the voltage drop • Should be close to the incoming: shortest feeder • Three types • Active Branch Circuit (60-80%) • Spare Branch Circuit with CB (10-20%) • Spare Branch Circuit (10-20%)

  20. Branch CircuitFeeder • Rated current of feeder is the total load deducted by the “demand factor” • Feeder Cable  Rating of CB • Rating of CB Feeder’s Rated Current

  21. Branch CircuitFeeder – Demand Factor • Demand Factor is the ratio of the maximum usage power at any certain time to the total connected load. • There are tables for the demand factor, e.g. receptacles in kitchen, lighting. If not specify, 0.8 is a good number

  22. Branch CircuitFeeder – Neutral • In single phase system, neutral cable will be the same size and line cable. • In three phase, neutral cable can be reduced. • Less than 200A, use the phase current • More than 300A • Without Harmonics, • With Harmonics, use the phase current

  23. Branch CircuitFeeder - Design Procedure • Sum up total BCs’ load • Calculate “Circuit Breaker” • Calculate “Cable”: Phase then Neutral • Verify “Voltage Drop”: 1-2% of rated voltage

  24. Branch CircuitLoad Schedule • List of connected load • CB number start from 1(A), 3(B), 5(C), 2(A), 4(B), 6(C) then 7(A), 9(B), 11(C), 8(A), 10(B), 12(C) • Consider the balance of load in all phases (less than 20% is recommended)

  25. Branch CircuitLoad Schedule – Design Recommendation • Load Calculation • Non-continuous Load, no multiplier • Continuous Load, 1.25 multiplier (or more in case of future expansion) • If not sure, treat as continuous load. • Then choose the circuit breaker • Then choose the cable

  26. Branch Circuit & FeederDesign Procedure • Make the Load Schedule • Design Branch Circuit • Design Feeder (from the load schedule)

  27. Branch Circuit & FeederDesign Examples

  28. Branch Circuit & FeederDesign Examples

  29. Reference • Electrical Systems Design: ประสิทธิ์ พิทยพัฒน์

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