Power factor is a term whose value can be found by dividing the power in a load to the product of the voltage and the current. It has been used as a rule of thumb to estimate the cost of the losses incurred in delivering reactive power. But it has been extremely troublesome. The same load might be penalized by some definitions, and might not by others. That is still the situation today. There have been two efforts at solution. In 1919 a committee of experts was formed to solve the problem of its definition. The effort did not succeed at producing a definition; two alternatives were recommended in the committee’s final report, but both were adopted. In 2010, IEEE issued Standard 1459 to give definitions. In this standard, definitions of power factor appear under no less than seven different headings. The problem demands solution. The matter is of considerable economic importance to power producers, consumers, and instrument makers. This paper examines the history of the topic, and explores reasons for the difficulty of definition in terms of measurement theory. It is shown that power factor is not suited to purpose. In fact, no definition can exist that will define power factor usefully for its intended economic purpose. Two alternatives are proposed.
Revised: August 31, 2020 |
Published: June 30, 2020
Citation
Kirkham H., D.R. White, and A. Riepnieks. 2020.Power Factor revisited. In IEEE International Instrumentation and Measurement Conference (I2MTC 2020), May 25-28, 2020, Dubrovnik, Croatia. Piscataway, New Jersey:IEEE.PNNL-SA-149740.doi:10.1109/I2MTC43012.2020.9129199