Is Reactive Power Useful? When Should It Be Minimized?

AI Thread Summary
Reactive power is essential for maintaining voltage levels in AC power systems, even though it does not perform useful work. It becomes particularly important when dealing with highly inductive loads, where adding capacitance can improve the power factor towards unity (p.f. 1). While minimizing reactive power is desirable to reduce inefficiencies, it is not always feasible due to the need for adequate infrastructure to handle the associated currents. Utilities often set power factor requirements, and users must weigh the costs of penalties against the investment in corrective technologies. Ultimately, reactive power is necessary for system stability, despite its inefficiency.
eric336
Messages
11
Reaction score
0
Yes I understand the definition of reactive power. It is the power that flows back and forth on transmission lines and does not do work(correct me). My question is, is reactive power useful? In what case reactive power has to be minimized as low as possible? I read an article about the importance of reactive power that it is required to maintain the voltage to deliver active power through transmission lines. Isn't p.f. 1, in other words zero reactive power, always what we want?
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
Reactive Power is the power that flows into and out of a Reactive Component (capacitor or inductor) as it discharges and charges in AC power. These components require current to charge, but this current does not contribute to the Real Power which is delivered to the load.

This Reactive Power is not useful per se; but it is very necessary. It becomes useful when you have a highly inductive load and add capacitance to balance the power factor more closely towards 1, but it is not something that we want, as it means a proportion of the current we are supplying is doing nothing for us, while we still need to rate wires/cables large enough to handle this additional current and the heat it generates.

Most of the time a distribution company will tell you what the requirements are for your power factor, and the appropriate penalties for not reaching it, and it is up to you to decide if it is cheaper to pay these penalties or install and maintain the technology to bring it back towards 1.
 
While I was rolling out a shielded cable, a though came to my mind - what happens to the current flow in the cable if there came a short between the wire and the shield in both ends of the cable? For simplicity, lets assume a 1-wire copper wire wrapped in an aluminum shield. The wire and the shield has the same cross section area. There are insulating material between them, and in both ends there is a short between them. My first thought, the total resistance of the cable would be reduced...
Hi all I have some confusion about piezoelectrical sensors combination. If i have three acoustic piezoelectrical sensors (with same receive sensitivity in dB ref V/1uPa) placed at specific distance, these sensors receive acoustic signal from a sound source placed at far field distance (Plane Wave) and from broadside. I receive output of these sensors through individual preamplifiers, add them through hardware like summer circuit adder or in software after digitization and in this way got an...
I am not an electrical engineering student, but a lowly apprentice electrician. I learn both on the job and also take classes for my apprenticeship. I recently wired my first transformer and I understand that the neutral and ground are bonded together in the transformer or in the service. What I don't understand is, if the neutral is a current carrying conductor, which is then bonded to the ground conductor, why does current only flow back to its source and not on the ground path...
Back
Top