2010 IEEE Industrial and Commercial Power Systems Technical Conference - Conference Record 2010
DOI: 10.1109/icps.2010.5489885
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Tracking simultaneous time-varying power harmonic distortions using filter banks

Abstract: Abstract-Although it is well known that the Fourier analysis is only accurately applicable to steady-state waveforms, it is a widely used tool to study and monitor time-varying signals, such as are commonplace in electrical power systems. The disadvantages of the Fourier analysis, such as frequency spillover or problems due to sampling (data window) truncation can often be minimized by various windowing techniques, but they nevertheless exist. This paper demonstrates that it is possible to track and visualize … Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Using the proposed filter bank structure and 69 th order filters, harmonic decomposition is done and reveals the timevarying nature of each harmonic. The harmonic decomposition has already been shown in references [1] and [2], and the decomposition using the proposed structure does not present visual differences. Table 1 shows a comparative result of the harmonic decomposition of the inrush current using different methods.…”
Section: A Simulated Signal -Inrush Currentsupporting
confidence: 55%
See 4 more Smart Citations
“…Using the proposed filter bank structure and 69 th order filters, harmonic decomposition is done and reveals the timevarying nature of each harmonic. The harmonic decomposition has already been shown in references [1] and [2], and the decomposition using the proposed structure does not present visual differences. Table 1 shows a comparative result of the harmonic decomposition of the inrush current using different methods.…”
Section: A Simulated Signal -Inrush Currentsupporting
confidence: 55%
“…The first method is a Sliding-Window Recursive DFT used for harmonic decomposition in [3]. The second method is the filter bank structure presented in [1] [2]. In this second method are used filters with 69 th and 33 rd order.…”
Section: A Simulated Signal -Inrush Currentmentioning
confidence: 99%
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