Calculadora de Corrección de Factor de Potencia

Ingresa potencia activa, factor de potencia actual y deseado para calcular los kVAR de corrección necesarios y el tamaño del condensador. Incluye diagrama de triángulo de potencia SVG y análisis de ahorro de costos.

0.78
0.95
Required Capacitor (kVAR)
47.4 kVAR
Nearest Standard Size: 50 kVARCapacitance (µF): 545.3 µF
Real Power (kW): 100.0 kW80.2 kVARBefore Correction: 128.2 kVAAfter Correction: 105.3 kVA-47.4 kVAR
Before Correction
Apparent Power (kVA)128.2 kVA
Reactive Power (kVAR)80.2 kVAR
Line Current (A)154.2 A
Power Factor0.78
After Correction
Apparent Power (kVA)105.3 kVA
Reactive Power (kVAR)32.9 kVAR
Line Current (A)126.6 A
Power Factor0.95
kVAR Reduction
-59.0%
Current Reduction
-17.9%
kVA Demand Reduction
-17.9%
I²R Loss Reduction
-32.6%

Standard Capacitor Banks

25 kVAR
30 kVAR
40 kVAR
50 kVAR
60 kVAR
75 kVAR

Penalty & Savings

Annual PF Penalty
$7,200
PF 0.78
Annual Savings After Correction
$7,200
PF 0.95
Total Capacitor Cost
$1,184
Required Capacitor (kVAR)
47.4 kVAR
Estimated Payback Period
2.0 months
Annual PF Penalty
PF 0.78$7,200
PF 0.95$0

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What is Power Factor Correction?

Power factor correction (PFC) is the process of adding capacitors to an electrical system to reduce reactive power (kVAR) and bring the power factor closer to unity (1.0). A low power factor means more current is drawn than necessary to deliver the same real power (kW), resulting in higher utility bills, increased cable losses, and reduced transformer capacity. Most industrial loads like motors, compressors, and welding equipment operate at power factors between 0.7 and 0.85. Utilities typically require a minimum power factor of 0.90-0.95 and impose penalties for lower values. The required capacitor size in kVAR equals kW × (tan(φ₁) − tan(φ₂)), where φ₁ and φ₂ are the phase angles before and after correction.

How to Use the Power Factor Correction Calculator

  1. Enter your real power demand in kW and current power factor from your utility bill
  2. Set the target power factor (typically 0.95 or higher to avoid penalties)
  3. Select single-phase or three-phase and enter system voltage
  4. View the required capacitor bank size in kVAR and the before/after power triangle
  5. Switch to Penalty & Savings tab to estimate annual cost savings and payback period

Frequently Asked Questions

What power factor should I target for correction?

Most utilities require a minimum power factor of 0.90 to avoid penalties, but targeting 0.95 to 0.98 is recommended. Correcting to exactly 1.0 (unity) is not advisable because it can lead to overcorrection (leading power factor) when loads vary, which can cause voltage issues and resonance problems.

How do I calculate the capacitor kVAR needed?

The required kVAR = kW × (tan(cos⁻¹(PF_current)) − tan(cos⁻¹(PF_target))). For example, a 200 kW load at 0.80 PF corrected to 0.95 requires 200 × (tan(36.87°) − tan(18.19°)) = 200 × (0.75 − 0.329) = 84.3 kVAR of capacitance.

What are the benefits of power factor correction?

Benefits include: reduced utility bills (elimination of PF penalties and lower kVA demand charges), reduced line current (a PF improvement from 0.80 to 0.95 reduces current by 16%), lower I²R cable losses (proportional to current squared), freed transformer/generator capacity, and improved voltage regulation at the load.

What is a power factor penalty?

Utilities charge penalties when power factor falls below a threshold (typically 0.90 or 0.85). Penalties are calculated as a percentage surcharge on the electric bill for each 0.01 PF below the threshold, or as an increased kVA demand charge. For example, at 0.80 PF with a $5,000/month bill and 1% penalty per 0.01 PF below 0.90, the annual penalty is $5,000 × 10% × 12 = $6,000.

Should I use fixed or automatic capacitor banks?

Fixed capacitor banks are suitable for constant loads like motors running continuously. Automatic (switched) capacitor banks with controllers are better for variable loads, as they switch capacitor stages in and out to maintain the target PF without risking overcorrection. For loads above 100 kVAR, automatic banks are generally recommended.

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