IEEE 1662-2016
$47.13
IEEE Recommended Practice for the Design and Application of Power Electronics in Electrical Power Systems
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
IEEE | 2016 | 68 |
Revision Standard – Active. Recommendations and requirements for the design and applications of power electronics in land-based (onshore) and marine (offshore) electrical power systems are provided in this standard. A wide range of power electronics equipment with aggregated power ratings at and above 100 kW with voltages equal or less than 52 kV (ac) or (dc) is covered. Existing engineering practices, analytical methods, and performance characteristics are described. Applicable international and local standards are referenced with appropriate guidance to provide users of the standard with correct criteria for design, testing, and maintenance necessary for reliable operation of integrated power systems.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
---|---|
1 | IEEE Std 1662™-2016 Front cover |
2 | Title page |
4 | Important Notices and Disclaimers Concerning IEEE Standards Documents |
7 | Participants |
9 | Introduction |
10 | Contents |
12 | 1. Overview 1.1 Scope 1.2 Purpose 1.3 Limitations 1.4 Equipment covered by this standard |
13 | 1.5 Guide for users 2. Normative references |
15 | 3. Definitions, acronyms, and abbreviations 3.1 Definitions |
16 | 3.2 Acronyms and abbreviations |
18 | 4. Power electronics (PE) equipment applications 4.1 Types of system-level functions |
19 | 4.2 Recommended PEBB architecture for PE applications 4.3 Typical applications 5. General requirements 5.1 Introduction 5.2 Power rating |
22 | 5.3 Voltage requirements |
23 | 5.4 Current requirements |
24 | 5.5 PE grounding |
25 | 5.6 Efficiency 5.7 No-load losses 5.8 Overload 5.9 Stress limits and derating factors |
26 | 5.10 Power quality requirements 5.11 Protection requirements |
27 | 5.12 Surge voltage withstanding capability 6. Design requirements 6.1 General 6.2 Size and weight 6.3 Reliability and maintainability requirements |
28 | 6.4 Dynamics requirements 6.5 PE local controllers |
29 | 6.6 Software |
30 | 6.7 Isolating means |
31 | 6.8 Fuses 6.9 Solid-state PE switches and circuit breakers 6.10 Environmental design requirements |
32 | 6.11 Electromagnetic effects |
33 | 6.12 Control circuits 6.13 Enclosures |
34 | 6.14 Design for safety 6.15 Nameplate |
35 | 6.16 Clearance and creepage distances 6.17 Quality assurance 7. Recommendations for system studies and analysis 7.1 General |
36 | 7.2 Examples of required technical information, data, and models 7.3 System-driven requirements |
37 | 8. PE analysis and design 8.1 Introduction |
38 | 8.2 Converter functions and power topologies |
40 | 8.3 Converter system-level design |
41 | 8.4 Equipment-level analysis and recommended models |
42 | 9. Testing, inspection, and maintenance 9.1 Testing |
44 | 9.2 Performance of tests |
45 | 9.3 Inspections, periodic tests, and maintenance |
46 | Annex A (informative) Bibliography |
50 | Annex B (normative) Power electronics (PE) in marine power systems B.1 Land-based (onshore) and marine (offshore) power systems differences |
51 | B.2 Marine applications specific design parameters |
53 | B.3 Marine PE testing |
54 | B.4 Grounding of marine systems |
57 | Annex C (informative) Stress limits of power semiconductors |
60 | Annex D (informative) Power quality and quality of service D.1 Power quality D.2 Quality of service |
61 | Annex E (informative) Analytical and design models E.1 Model classifications |
63 | E.2 Model review |
65 | E.3 Case analysis |
68 | Back cover |