Electric Motor and Drives: Master Phase Unbalance
What is an electric motor and phase unbalance?
An electric motor is an energy converter that transforms electrical energy into mechanical energy. Combined with an electric drive (Variable Frequency Drive VFD), it enables precise speed and torque control. Phase unbalance occurs when voltages between the three phases of a three-phase system are unequal: a voltage unbalance of just 2% generates a current unbalance 6 to 15 times higher, causing overheating, vibrations, increased power consumption and drastic reduction of motor life (NF EN 60034-1 / NEMA MG-1).
Technical Summary: Key Points
1. What is an electric motor and an electric drive?
An electric motor is an energy converter that transforms electrical energy into mechanical energy. The electric drive (or drive) is a complete system that integrates the motor, a variable frequency drive (VFD) and the mechanical load, ensuring precise speed and torque control.
Electric motor
Energy converter: electrical → mechanical. Heart of the drive system.
Energy source
Three-phase 400 V / 50 Hz network (European standard) or DC network for embedded applications.
Converter (VFD)
Electronic core: rectifier, DC bus, IGBT PWM inverter. Variable voltage and frequency.
Mechanical load
Pump, fan, conveyor, crusher; each load has a specific torque-speed curve.
2. Industrial electric motor families
| Motor Type | Principle | Efficiency | Unbalance Sensitivity | Applications |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Squirrel-cage induction (IM) | Rotating field induces rotor current | IE2–IE4 | ⚠️ High | Pumps, fans, conveyors |
| Permanent magnet synchronous (PMSM) | Synchronized magnet rotor | IE4–IE5 | ⚠️ Moderate | Robotics, electric vehicles |
| Synchronous reluctance (SynRM) | Magnetic reluctance difference | IE4 | ⚠️ Moderate | Pumps, HVAC |
| DC motor (DCM) | Flux/torque separation by commutator | IE2 | ✅ Low | Rolling mills, old-generation hoists |
3. The VFD: heart of modern drives
Scalar V/f
Accuracy ±1–3%. For pumps, fans.
Sensorless vector
Accuracy ±0.5%. Standard conveyors.
Vector with encoder (FOC)
Accuracy ±0.01%. Robotics.
Direct Torque Control (DTC)
Direct torque control. Cranes, hoists.
4. Definition and physical mechanism
Definition
Phase unbalance is the inequality of voltage (or current) amplitudes between the three phases of a three-phase system. It is measured as the maximum relative deviation from the average voltage. Unbalance generates a negative sequence component: a parasitic rotating field that opposes the main field.
Main causes
- Unevenly distributed single-phase loads
- Defective fuses or circuit breakers
- Loose or oxidized connections
- Unbalanced three-phase transformers
5. Consequences on electric motors
Amplification
Current unbalance is 6 to 15 times higher than voltage unbalance.
Service life
Every additional 10°C halves insulation life.
Critical VUF
3.5% unbalance → ~25°C temperature rise.
Phase loss
Doubled stator current → rapid destruction if protection does not trip.
6. Phase unbalance: impact on power consumption?
Current increase
5% voltage unbalance → phase current > +20% above normal value.
Additional Joule losses
P = R × I²: current increase amplifies Joule losses in windings.
Excess consumption
A 5% unbalance can cause a 5 to 15% increase in consumption.
Energy cost
For a 100kW motor running 6000h/year, energy loss can exceed 50,000 kWh/year.
- • Phase current: +22% on the most loaded phase
- • Additional Joule losses: +48%
- • Degraded efficiency: drops to 89-90%
- • Annual excess consumption: ~35,000 kWh for 6000h operation
7. Phase unbalance calculation
| VUF (%) | Current unbalance | Temperature rise | Estimated excess consumption | Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0–1% | 0–10% | Negligible | < 1% | None |
| 1–2% | 10–20% | +5 to +10 °C | 1-3% | Monitoring |
| 2–3% | 20–30% | +10 to +25 °C | 3-8% | Mandatory derating |
| 3–5% | 30–50% | +25 to +50 °C | 8-15% | Stop and urgent correction |
| 5% | > 50% | > 50 °C | > 15% | ⚠️ Danger - Immediate action |
8. Step-by-step diagnosis protocol
- 1Measure phase voltages
Multimeter or analyzer. Calculate VUF. - 2Measure phase currents
Current unbalance >5% without voltage unbalance → internal motor fault. - 3Measure ohmic resistances
Micro-ohmmeter. Unbalance >5% → probable short circuit. - 4Inspect connections and cables
Check tightening, corrosion, fuses.
9. Protections against phase unbalance
Unbalance relay
Adjustable threshold (2–5%), trip <10s.
VFD drive
Integrated detection (PHF fault). Isolates the motor.
Electronic thermal relay
Unbalance compensation.
PTC/PT100 sensors
Independent real temperature measurement.
10. Thresholds and reference standards
Technical abbreviations
| Acronym | Meaning |
|---|---|
| VFD | Variable Frequency Drive |
| VUF | Voltage Unbalance Factor |
| IM | Induction Motor (squirrel-cage) |
| PMSM | Permanent Magnet Synchronous Motor |
| SynRM | Synchronous Reluctance Motor |
| DTC | Direct Torque Control |
Frequently asked questions
At 5% voltage unbalance, the phase current can exceed 20% of the normal value, causing increased Joule losses and excess consumption of up to 15% depending on motor power and operating time.
Gearless system, efficiency >95%, sensitive to unbalance.
Partially. Modern VFDs with integrated PHF protection can detect unbalance and trip.
Same NEMA formula: CUF (%) = (|I_max - I_avg| / I_avg) × 100. Acceptable threshold: 5%.
Yes, using power quality analyzers (e.g., Fluke 438-II) that calculate VUF, loss increase and impact on motor efficiency in real time.
Monitor your electric motors in real time with Wattnow
Detect phase unbalances and reduce your energy losses before they damage your equipment.
Request a demoSpecialists in energy monitoring, power quality and electric motor protection. Wattnow deployed in over 150 industrial sites.