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Load Sharing in Diesel Gensets
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Load Sharing in Diesel Gensets

What is Load Sharing in Diesel Generators?

Load sharing is the process of distributing electrical load evenly (or according to a set priority) among multiple generators running in parallel. This is essential in applications where the power demand exceeds the capacity of a single generator or where redundancy and flexibility are required (e.g., in hospitals, data centers, industrial plants).

Types of Load Sharing

  1. Real Power (kW) Sharing – Managed through speed control.
  2. Reactive Power (kVAR) Sharing – Managed through voltage control.

How Load Sharing is Accomplished

  1. Governors (Speed Controllers) – Adjust the engine’s fuel to control real power output.
  2. AVRs (Automatic Voltage Regulators) – Adjust excitation to control reactive power output.
  3. Parallel Operation Controllers – Like ComAp IntelliGen or DSE8610, these facilitate synchronization, load sharing, protection, and communication.

Real Power Load Sharing (kW)

  • Managed by adjusting the engine speed.
  • Generators with matching droop and setpoints will share active power proportionally.
  • If one generator is overloaded, load-sharing control reduces its fuel injection (and therefore power output), while increasing it for the underloaded unit.

Reactive Power Load Sharing (kVAR)

  • Managed by adjusting excitation voltage.
  • Each generator's AVR needs to coordinate with others through either:
    • Cross-current compensation or
    • Centralized controller logic.
  • Imbalance can cause circulating currents, overheating alternators.

What is Speed Droop?

Speed droop is a method of governing in which the generator’s output frequency slightly decreases as load increases.

Example:

  • A generator set to 50 Hz at no load may drop to 49.5 Hz at full load (1% droop).
  • This natural drop allows multiple gensets to share load without fighting each other.

Relationship Between Power Management and Speed Droop

Power Management Goals:

  • Maintain stable power supply.
  • Optimize fuel usage and efficiency.
  • Avoid overloading or underutilizing any genset.

Speed Droop’s Role in Power Management:

  • Acts as a self-regulating mechanism for load sharing in real power.
  • Prevents hunting and instability during parallel operation.
  • Works with the power management system (PMS), which:
    • Starts/stops gensets based on demand.
    • Balances load across generators.
    • Prioritizes certain sets (e.g., base load, peaking).

Without Droop:

  • All generators would try to maintain identical speed.
  • Even slight load changes could cause unstable oscillations (known as “hunting”).

Summary

AspectDescription
Load SharingEnsures even distribution of kW and kVAR among generators.
Speed DroopAllows generators to share load proportionally without control conflict.
Power ManagementOversees operation strategy — including which gensets run, for how long, and at what load.
InterconnectionDroop is foundational for real power sharing, which is one of the core tasks of power management systems.

If you're using advanced digital controllers like ComAp IntelliGen, DSE8610, or Woodward, these functions are built-in and managed automatically through CAN communication or analog signals, reducing manual tuning and increasing system resilience.