This article presents a free harmonic derating screening calculator concept for generators and transformers operation
It explains standards, calculation methods, example workflows, and practical mitigation strategies for nonlinear loads applications
Harmonic Derating Screening Calculator for Generators and Transformers (Nonlinear Load Input)
Background and standards context for harmonic derating
Harmonic currents from nonlinear loads create additional heating and stress on rotating machines and power transformers. Standards and guides define measurement methods, limits, and how to translate spectral currents into derating or K-factor requirements. Key references include IEEE and IEC documents that the screening calculator must reference when assessing compliance and capacity. This article describes the calculation methodology, typical input spectra for common loads, formulas used by manufacturers, worked examples, and practical mitigation. Engineers can use the screening procedure to quickly identify when a detailed thermal/finite-element analysis is required and when simple derating suffices.Fundamental harmonic theory and thermal equivalence
Harmonics are integer multiples of the system fundamental frequency (e.g., 50 Hz or 60 Hz). When a conductor or transformer winding carries harmonic currents, heating is driven by two main phenomena:- I2R losses: resistive heating increases with the square of the RMS current at each harmonic.
- Frequency-dependent losses: eddy current and core losses increase with frequency, roughly proportional to h2 or higher orders depending on material and geometry.
Key formulas (expressed in plain HTML)
Total RMS line current:
Irms = √(Σh=1n Ih2)

K-factor (transformer/manufacturer definition):
K = Σh=1n (Ih/I1)2 × h2
Equivalent heating current:
Ieq = √(Σh=1n Ih2 × h2) = I1 × √K
Transformer allowable continuous fundamental current when derated for harmonics:
Iallow = Inameplate / √K
Percent derating required:
Derating (%) = 100 × (1 − 1/√K) (when K > 1; otherwise 0%)
Variable explanations and typical input values
- Ih — RMS current magnitude of harmonic order h (A). Typical values provided in tables below as a percentage of I1 (fundamental current).
- I1 — Fundamental RMS current (A). Example: for a 400 V, 500 kVA transformer, I1 ≈ 720 A line current at 400 V three-phase (I = S / (√3 × V)).
- K — Dimensionless heating factor used by transformer manufacturers; K <= 1 indicates no extra heating relative to sine, K > 1 indicates increased heating.
- Ieq — Equivalent heating current (A) reflecting combined harmonic heating effect.
- h — Harmonic order (integer): 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, ...
Typical harmonic spectra for common nonlinear sources
| Harmonic order (h) | 6-pulse diode/thyristor rectifier (% of I1) | 3-phase 6-pulse VFD with LC filter (% of I1) | 12-pulse rectifier (% of I1) | 3-phase active front-end (AFE) / PWM inverter (% of I1) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 (fundamental) | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 |
| 3 | Negligible (delta-mitigated) | 2–5 | Negligible | 1–3 |
| 5 | 20–30 | 10–18 | 6–10 | 2–8 |
| 7 | 10–18 | 6–14 | 3–6 | 1–5 |
| 9 | 3–8 | 2–6 | 1–3 | 1–3 |
| 11 | 6–12 | 3–8 | 2–5 | 0.5–3 |
| 13 | 4–8 | 2–6 | 1–3 | 0.5–2 |
| 17 | 2–6 | 1–4 | 0.5–2 | <1 |
| 19 | 1.5–4 | 1–3 | <1 | <1 |
| >20 | small but cumulative | small wideband noise | very small | higher-order switching components |
Transformer derating guidance and lookup
Many transformer manufacturers and IEEE guide C57.110 specify how K-factor maps to derating. The following table provides commonly used reference points for quick screening. For safety, apply the conservative end of ranges unless manufacturer-specified curves are available.| K-factor | Equivalent heating current Ieq relative to I1 (Ieq/I1) | Allowable percent of nameplate continuous current (Iallow/Inameplate) | Recommended action (screening) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.0 | 1.00 | 100% | No derating required |
| 1.5 | 1.225 | 81.6% | Consider class H or K-rated transformer; re-evaluate load |
| 2.0 | 1.414 | 70.7% | Derate to ~70%; use K-rated transformer or add filtering |
| 3.0 | 1.732 | 57.7% | Significant derating; specialist design required |
| 5.0 | 2.236 | 44.7% | High harmonic heating; require K-class transformer or alternative topology |
| 10.0 | 3.162 | 31.6% | Unacceptable without active filtering or reconfiguration |
Generator screening considerations
Generators are affected differently from transformers. Harmonic currents can increase stator copper losses, cause rotor heating through harmonic-induced flux, and produce torque pulsations and shaft torsional stresses. Standards to consult include:- IEC 60034-1 (ratings of rotating electrical machines)
- IEEE Std 519 (system harmonic limits)
- Manufacturer application notes (e.g., Caterpillar, Cummins, Siemens) for generator derating under nonsinusoidal loads
| Generator prime mover type | Common issue with harmonics | Screening action |
|---|---|---|
| Diesel IC engine driven | Additional heating in stator and possible AVR instability | Use Ieq comparison; consult OEM for rotor heating curves |
| Gas turbine | Better thermal margin; still susceptible to waveform distortion | Check manufacturer curves; often less derating required |
| Large synchronous machines | Significant core and rotor eddy losses at harmonic frequencies | Detailed electromagnetic analysis recommended if K > 2 |
Screening calculator algorithm and step-by-step procedure
A practical free screening calculator implements the following steps:- Input fundamental system frequency, rated voltage, and nameplate currents for transformer/generator.
- Obtain harmonic spectrum: measured Ih values or use conservative typical spectra by load type.
- Compute Irms = √(Σ Ih2).
- Compute K = Σ (Ih/I1)2 × h2.
- Compute Ieq = I1 × √K.
- For transformers: compute Iallow = Inameplate / √K and Derating% = 100 × (1 − 1/√K).
- For generators: compare Ieq against available stator rating and consult OEM guidance for rotor heating; apply conservative derating similar to transformers unless OEM data indicates otherwise.
- Report whether immediate mitigation is required, and show recommended actions: filtering, transformer upsizing, K-rated transformer, or generator oversizing.
Implementation notes and tolerances
- Use measured harmonic currents when available; screening with assumed spectra is conservative but may overestimate derating.
- Include interharmonics and DC offset contributions when using rectifier front-ends with unsymmetrical loads—these can increase heating.
- Round K and currents to appropriate significant digits for reporting; include a safety margin (e.g., +10% to Ieq) for screening if measurement uncertainty exists.
Worked example 1 — Transformer feeding a 6-pulse rectifier (complete)
Scenario: - 500 kVA, 400 V three-phase transformer, nameplate line current Inameplate = 500000 VA / (√3 × 400 V) = 721.69 A → round to 722 A. - Nonlinear load: 6-pulse rectifier supplying a DC load. Measured/load-assumed fundamental current I1 = 600 A (load draws less than transformer rating). - Measured harmonic spectrum (RMS) or conservative typical values as a percent of I1: - 5th: 25% → I5 = 0.25 × 600 = 150 A - 7th: 12% → I7 = 0.12 × 600 = 72 A - 11th: 8% → I11 = 48 A - 13th: 5% → I13 = 30 A - 17th: 3% → I17 = 18 A - 19th: 2% → I19 = 12 A - Higher orders negligible for screening. Step 1 — Compute Irms (total RMS current): Irms = √(I12 + I52 + I72 + I112 + I132 + I172 + I192) = √(6002 + 1502 + 722 + 482 + 302 + 182 + 122) = √(360000 + 22500 + 5184 + 2304 + 900 + 324 + 144) = √(390356) ≈ 625.04 A Step 2 — Compute K: K = Σ (Ih/I1)2 × h2 Compute term-by-term: - h=1: (I1/I1)2 × 12 = 1 × 1 = 1.000 - h=5: (150/600)2 × 25 = (0.25)2 × 25 = 0.0625 × 25 = 1.5625 - h=7: (72/600)2 × 49 = (0.12)2 × 49 = 0.0144 × 49 = 0.7056 - h=11: (48/600)2 × 121 = (0.08)2 × 121 = 0.0064 × 121 = 0.7744 - h=13: (30/600)2 × 169 = (0.05)2 × 169 = 0.0025 × 169 = 0.4225 - h=17: (18/600)2 × 289 = (0.03)2 × 289 = 0.0009 × 289 = 0.2601 - h=19: (12/600)2 × 361 = (0.02)2 × 361 = 0.0004 × 361 = 0.1444 Sum K = 1.000 + 1.5625 + 0.7056 + 0.7744 + 0.4225 + 0.2601 + 0.1444 = 4.8695 ≈ 4.87 Step 3 — Compute Ieq: Ieq = I1 × √K = 600 × √4.8695 ≈ 600 × 2.206 ≈ 1,323.6 A Step 4 — Derating for transformer: Iallow = Inameplate / √K = 722 / 2.206 ≈ 327.3 A Interpretation: - The nominal transformer can carry 722 A for a sinusoidal load but with this harmonic spectrum its allowable continuous fundamental current to avoid overheating is approximately 327 A. - The actual fundamental load current is 600 A (per the scenario), far exceeding Iallow, so this transformer would require significant derating: Derating% = 100 × (1 − 1/√K) = 100 × (1 − 1/2.206) ≈ 54.7%. - Actions: upsizing transformer to match Ieq, select a K-rated transformer designed for K ≈ 5, or install harmonic mitigation (12-pulse conversion, active front end, or filters) to reduce harmonic amplitudes. Notes: - This screening yields a very high K (~4.87) because of large 5th and 11th harmonics. Using a 12-pulse rectifier or active filtering can reduce K significantly.Worked example 2 — 2 MW generator supplying a mixed nonlinear load (complete)
Scenario: - 2.0 MW, 11 kV synchronous generator; rated line current Inameplate = S / (√3 × V) = 2,000,000 VA / (√3 × 11,000 V) ≈ 105.0 A. - The generator supplies a plant with many VFDs and UPS units. Measured harmonic spectrum per phase (RMS) expressed as percent of I1 (measured I1 = 90 A operating load per phase): - 1: 100% - 3: 4% → 3.6 A - 5: 10% → 9.0 A - 7: 6% → 5.4 A - 11: 3% → 2.7 A - 13: 2% → 1.8 A - Higher orders total 2% → 1.8 A Step 1 — Compute Irms: Irms = √(902 + 3.62 + 9.02 + 5.42 + 2.72 + 1.82 + 1.82) = √(8100 + 12.96 + 81 + 29.16 + 7.29 + 3.24 + 3.24) = √(8236.89) ≈ 90.77 A Step 2 — Compute K: K terms: - h=1: 1.000 - h=3: (3.6/90)2 × 9 = (0.04)2 × 9 = 0.0016 × 9 = 0.0144 - h=5: (9/90)2 × 25 = (0.10)2 × 25 = 0.01 × 25 = 0.25 - h=7: (5.4/90)2 × 49 = (0.06)2 × 49 = 0.0036 × 49 = 0.1764 - h=11: (2.7/90)2 × 121 = (0.03)2 × 121 = 0.0009 × 121 = 0.1089 - h=13: (1.8/90)2 × 169 = (0.02)2 × 169 = 0.0004 × 169 = 0.0676 - higher orders aggregated: (1.8/90)2 × average h2 (conservatively use h=25 squared=625) = (0.02)2 × 625 = 0.0004 × 625 = 0.25 (this is conservative aggregation) Sum K ≈ 1 + 0.0144 + 0.25 + 0.1764 + 0.1089 + 0.0676 + 0.25 = 1.8673 ≈ 1.87 Step 3 — Compute Ieq: Ieq = I1 × √K = 90 × √1.8673 ≈ 90 × 1.366 ≈ 122.94 A Step 4 — Generator screening and interpretation: - The generator nameplate current is 105 A. The equivalent heating current per phase is 123 A, exceeding nameplate by ≈ 17.1 A (≈16.6% higher). - This indicates additional heating and potential derating required. For conservative design, derate the generator capacity by the ratio Ieq/Inameplate = 123 / 105 ≈ 1.17 → require ~17% larger generator or reduce harmonics. - Additionally consult OEM: rotor heating and excitation system should be checked; for K ≈ 1.87, many manufacturers recommend further analysis and possibly derating. Recommended actions: - Reduce harmonic content via line reactors, passive filters, or active front-ends to lower Ieq. - If mitigation not possible, oversize generator by at least 20% or select generator with specifications allowing operation with these harmonic levels.Practical mitigation strategies and design recommendations
When screening indicates unacceptable derating, consider the following mitigation hierarchy:- Reduce harmonic generation at the source:
- Upgrade 6-pulse rectifiers to 12-pulse architecture or use multi-pulse rectification.
- Use active front-end (AFE) converters for sensitive loads.
- Install DC-link, passive smoothing, or synchronous rectification where applicable.
- Install harmonic filters:
- Detuned (tuned) passive filters for dominant harmonic orders.
- Broadband passive filters or active harmonic filters for variable spectra.
- Advantages/constraints: passive filters require design for resonance avoidance with system impedance; active filters provide dynamic compensation but are costlier.
- Use K-rated transformers or transformers with higher thermal margins:
- K-rated transformers have specific construction to handle harmonic heating.
- Consider transformer oversizing by a factor approximating √K to avoid derating.
- Generator strategies:
- Oversize prime mover/generator set to accommodate Ieq derived heating.
- Consult OEM for rotor/stator heating curves and AVR stability under harmonic load.
- Employ islanding and selective load shedding where possible to reduce peaks.
Measurement, data quality, and implementation tips
- Use high-resolution harmonic analyzers or power quality meters capable of individual harmonic current measurement up to at least the 50th order for comprehensive screening.
- Sample in steady-state load conditions and record multiple points: minimum, typical, and maximum load states.
- Include load diversity: multiple nonlinear loads operating simultaneously can create interharmonics and different spectra than single-device tests.
- When using assumed spectra, adopt a conservative approach and document assumptions for traceability.
Normative references and further reading
- IEEE Std 519-2014 — Recommended Practice and Requirements for Harmonic Control in Electric Power Systems. See: https://standards.ieee.org/standard/519-2014.html
- IEEE C57.110-2018 — Guide for Establishing Transformer Capability When Supplying Nonsinusoidal Load Currents. See: https://standards.ieee.org/standard/C57_110-2018.html
- IEC 61000-3-6 — Electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) — Limits for harmonic current emissions (industrial equipment). See: https://www.iec.ch/
- Caterpillar/Cummins generator application notes — example resources: Cummins "Generator and Harmonics" whitepapers provide practical vendor guidance (search vendor PDFs for your OEM).
- Manufacturer papers: ABB, Siemens, Schneider Electric application notes on "Transformers for Non-linear Loads" and "Harmonic Mitigation Techniques". Example: https://www.abb.com/
Final technical recommendations and screening deliverables
For an effective free screening calculator result package, produce:- A short executive summary indicating whether immediate mitigation is required.
- Detailed harmonic spectrum table and plots (if measured), indicating each Ih and percent of fundamental.
- Calculated values: Irms, K, Ieq, Iallow, and recommended derating percentage.
- Recommended mitigation options with estimated cost/benefit (filtering, upsizing, or K-rated transformers).
- References to standards and OEM consultation notes for final design verification.
- IEEE Std 519-2014 — https://standards.ieee.org/standard/519-2014.html
- IEEE C57.110 Guide — https://standards.ieee.org/standard/C57_110-2018.html
- IEC family (general) — https://www.iec.ch/standards
- ABB application notes (search "transformer harmonic heating") — https://new.abb.com/
- Cummins whitepapers on power quality and generator sizing — https://www.cummins.com/