Published September 4, 2019 | Version 1
Conference paper Open

Detection Methods for Current Signals Causing Errors in Static Electricity Meters

Description

In recent years, the shift to Distributed Generation (DG) and the use of smarter domestic appliances has led to an
increasing integration of power electronics (active infeed converters,power drive systems etc.) at the household level. However,
the use of more power electronics results in the generation of highly distorted currents entering the distribution grid. Previous
research shows that such current waveforms can cause large errors in static electricity meters. Thus, there is an imperative
need to study the characteristics of these current waveforms and their impact on meter readings by performing extended
measurements in households. Since it is not practical to store all the high granularity waveform data of such measurements,
suitable detection methods and trigger levels need to be defined to only capture the potentially problematic current waveforms.
In this paper, signal processing techniques (differentiation, Short Time Fourier Transform and Wavelet Transform) are applied to
current signals in order to extract features suitable for use as a trigger. Results show that the Discrete Wavelet Transform and the filter with derivative method give the most promising results and work reliably even for very noisy signals.

Notes

This work is part of the EU joint research project "17NRM02, MeterEMI, Electromagnetic Interference on Static Electricity Meters" which has received funding from the EMPIR programme co-financed by the Participating States and from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme.

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Detection Methods for Current Signals Causing error in static meters.pdf