Explanation of NCEES #112

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ElecPwrPEOct11

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Hi.

I worked through this problem and am not satisfied with NCEES answer. I understand how to eliminate answers a-c from your choice, but I would like to understand why option D is the correct answer. Is it because NO symmetrical components technically pass through the neutral grounding resistor?

I think my problem is that I don't understand how positive, negative, and zero sequence components relate to physical voltages/currents in the 'real' world. Thanks for any help.

 
The reason D is the correct answer is that the positive sequence currents are balanced and the negative sequence currents are balanced. If your currents are balanced, the neutral current will be zero. By definition, only zero sequence currents will flow through the ground resistor.

 
The reason D is the correct answer is that the positive sequence currents are balanced and the negative sequence currents are balanced. If your currents are balanced, the neutral current will be zero. By definition, only zero sequence currents will flow through the ground resistor.
Very succinct and well put. That makes sense, thanks! I had never thought of sequence currents in a context outside of the mathematics. They're still such a weird concept to me.

 
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