The Reactive Power Calculator is a specialized online calculator designed to analyze transformer
- Reactive power,
- Power factor correction and
- System efficiency.
This post provides comprehensive guidance on how to use the calculator, understand the input parameters, interpret results and apply the formulas in practical power system engineering.
To perform the calculation:
- Fill in all 6 input fields with transformer and load parameters
- Click the Calculate button
- Review results displayed in multiple units (kVAR / MVAR, kVA / MVA, kW / MW)
- Use the formula reference section to understand calculations
Calculator
Reactive Power Calculator
Transformer reactive power & power factor analysis
Q₁ = P × tan(cos⁻¹(PF₁)) — current reactive power (kVAR)
Q₂ = P × tan(cos⁻¹(PF₂)) — target reactive power (kVAR)
Qc = Q₁ − Q₂ — capacitor bank required (kVAR)
S = P ÷ PF₁ — apparent power (kVA)
θ = cos⁻¹(PF) — phase angle (degrees)
P_loss = (S × Z%) ÷ 100 — transformer copper losses (kW)
1 MVAR = 1000 kVAR | 1 MVA = 1000 kVA | 1 MW = 1000 kW
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What is Reactive Power?
Reactive Power (Q) is measured in VAR or MVAR and this represents the component of apparent power that does not contribute to useful work. It is calculated from the phase angle between voltage and current.
What is Apparent Power?
Apparent Power (S) is the vector sum of active and reactive power that is calculated as P / PF. This is the total power drawn from the supply.
What is Power Factor?
Power Factor is the ratio of active to apparent power (cosine of the phase angle). Values range from 0 to 1; unity (1.0) means pure resistive load with no reactive component.
What is Phase Angle?
Phase Angle (θ) is the angle between the current and voltage waveforms. Higher angles indicate lower power factors and more reactive power. Calculated as θ = arccos(PF).
What is Transformer Losses?
Transformer losses is primarily copper losses due to resistance in transformer windings that is calculated as
Ploss = (S x Z%) / 100
These represent energy dissipated as heat.
Formulas & Calculations
The following formulas are used in the calculator.
| Calculation | Formula |
| Current Reactive Power | Q₁ = P x tan(cos⁻¹(PF₁)) |
| Target Reactive Power | Q₂ = P x tan(cos⁻¹(PF₂)) |
| Capacitor Bank Required | Qc = Q₁ − Q₂ |
| Apparent Power | S = P / PF₁ |
| Phase Angle | θ = cos⁻¹(PF) |
| Transformer Losses | Ploss = (S x Z%) / 100 |
Input Parameters
Transformer Parameters
| Parameter | Unit | Description & Range |
| Transformer Capacity | kVA | The rated apparent power of the transformer in kilovolt-amperes. Typical range: 10 to 1000+ kVA for distribution transformers. |
| Short Circuit Impedance | % | Represents the voltage drop when the transformer is short circuited at rated current. Typical range: 5–15%. Higher values indicate greater impedance. |
Load Parameters
| Parameter | Unit | Description & Range |
| Active Power | kW | Real power delivered to the load. Represents the power actually consumed (doing useful work). |
| Current Power Factor | 0–1 | Existing power factor of the load. Values < 1.0 indicate inductive loads. Typical range: 0.6 to 0.95. |
| Target Power Factor | 0–1 | The desired corrected power factor after capacitor installation. Typically 0.90 to 0.99 for industrial systems. |
| Supply Voltage | kV | Transformer primary voltage (input voltage). Typical values: 11 kV, 22 kV, 33 kV, etc. |
Important Note: Target power factor must be higher than the current power factor.
Unit Conversion Factors
The calculator automatically converts between standard and mega units:
1 MVAR = 1000 kVAR
1 MVA = 1000 kVA
1 MW = 1000 kW
Output Results
The calculator generates 8 important results:
| Result | Units | Description |
| Current Reactive Power | kVAR / MVAR | Existing reactive power drawn by the load based on current power factor |
| Target Reactive Power | kVAR / MVAR | Desired reactive power at the target power factor after correction |
| Required Capacitor Size | kVAR / MVAR | Capacitor bank rating needed to achieve target power factor |
| Apparent Power (S) | kVA / MVA | Total power drawn from the supply (vector sum of P and Q) |
| Phase Angle – Current | Degrees | Phase difference between voltage and current at current PF |
| Phase Angle – Target | Degrees | Phase difference at the target power factor after correction |
| Transformer Losses | kW / MW | Estimated copper losses (I²R losses) in transformer windings |
| Load Utilization | % | Percentage of transformer rated capacity being used |
Practical Applications
Power Factor Correction
Power factor correction reduces the reactive power drawn from the power grid by installing capacitor banks.
This improves efficiency, reduces transmission losses and lowers utility bills by avoiding the reactive power charges.
Transformer Efficiency
Transformer losses increase with load.
The calculator estimates copper losses (I²R losses) as a percentage of transformer impedance which is helping engineers to assess the thermal stress and efficiency.
Load Utilization
The utilization percentage indicates how much of the transformers rated capacity is being utilized.
Values > 80% warrant consideration of the transformer upgrading (or) load balancing.
Typical Parameter Values
| Parameter | Typical Range | Notes |
| Transformer Capacity | 10 kVA to 1000+ kVA | Distribution & industrial transformers |
| Short Circuit Impedance | 5–15% | Typically for the distribution transformers |
| Current Power Factor | 0.60–0.95 | Industrial loads i.e., typically 0.75–0.85 |
| Target Power Factor | 0.90–0.99 | 0.95 is industry standard target |
| Supply Voltage | 11 kV, 22 kV, 33 kV, 138 kV | Common distribution voltages |
Error Handling & Validation
The calculator validates all inputs:
- All fields must be filled with numeric values.
- All parameters should be positive (greater than 0).
- Active power cannot > transformer capacity.
- Power factors should be between 0 and 1.
- Target power factor should be higher than current power factor.
Solved Example
Industrial facility with a 100 kVA transformer and inductive motor loads.
| Input Parameter | Value | Unit |
| Transformer Capacity | 100 | kVA |
| Short Circuit Impedance | 8 | % |
| Active Power | 60 | kW |
| Current Power Factor | 0.75 | - |
| Target Power Factor | 0.95 | - |
| Supply Voltage | 11 | kV |
Results
Current reactive power: 52.29 kVAR (0.0523 MVAR)
Target reactive power: 14.53 kVAR (0.0145 MVAR)
Required capacitor size: 37.76 kVAR (0.0378 MVAR)
Transformer losses: 7.20 kW (0.0072 MW)
Load utilization: 60.0%
