Specifications
39
EATON Pulsar Series and Powerware Series Product Catalogue
Powerware Hot Sync Technology
Figure 2. Well-balanced load share is achieved by adjusting output 
frequencies;thusthephasedifferencebetweenparallelUPSoutput
voltages is forced to zero.
Voltages out of phase
Outputs are synchronised
V
UPS 1
V
UPS 2
UPS 1
f
1
UPS 2
f
2
P
1
P
2
P
1+2
P
1
P
2
Power level difference diminishes
Frequencies are continuously 
adjusted based on P
1
 and P
2
The secret here is a patented built-in digital signal processor (DSP) 
algorithm, running continuously in each unit. It drives the UPS 
outputs toward synchronisation and takes care of load sharing. If 
there is a common bypass available, it is used as valid synchro-
nisation source for output. In the absence of a common bypass, 
the processor makes subtle adjustments to the inverter frequency 
on the basis of output power level measurement in order to find 
a common frequency and load balance among the units. There 
exists, as shown in Figure 2, a relationship between the power 
imbalance and the voltage phase difference.
90 
deg
V
diff
0 deg
V
1
V
2
I
diff
Compute 
output power p
n
Integrate Dp
n
 into  
inverter input frequency 
f
n
 = f
n-1
 - K1*p
n
 - K2*p
n
Compute 
Dp
n
 - p
n-1
Adjust frequency 
of inverter to f
n
Fn = F
n-1
 – K1(Pn) – K2(DPn)
Where: 
Fn = frequency
F
n-1
 = previous frequency
Pn = power to load 
K1 = frequency reduction factor
K2 = power change rate factor
Figure 3. A phase displacement between parallel connected UPS volt-
ages (V1 and V2) causes current flow between the units thus imbal-
ances load share. 
Figure 4. With HotSync algorithm, inverter phase angel is adjusted by 
output power and its change rate.
The internal output impedance of a UPS is inherently mainly induc-
tive, i.e. it looks as a small inductor in series with a stiff alternating 
voltage source. So, if there is any difference between the output 
voltage phases, it means that there is a power flow from unit to 
unit, resulting in unequal load sharing. In the Figure 3, two units 
have equal output voltages with phase angle displacement. 
The voltage Vdiff and current Idiff between units exhibit a 90 
degrees phase shift due to the inductive source impedance. The 
main voltage (V1 and V2) and the current between units Idiff are in 
phase resulting in active power flow.
The greater the phase shift, the heavier the power imbalance. If 
we now introduce a controller to adjust the voltage phase by the 
output power, the phase difference can be forced to decrease. 
To adjust the phase difference to zero and to achieve accurate 
load sharing, we may integrate the measured phase thus arriving 
at power-controlled frequency. For the purpose of fast frequency 
locking and to enable synchronisation to external bypass, a term 
containing the power level change rate is added. 
The flow diagram (Figure 4) shows how the load sharing proceeds.
The output power is monitored and the new frequency calculated 
at 3000 times per second. The measurements are also used for 
fast identification of a failed module. This feature is based on the 
computation of instantaneous output power. A negative value, 
even for a single instant, is an indication of an internal failure, e.g. 
a shorted inverter IGBT. In a response the UPS trips immediately 
off-line, causing minimal voltage disturbance. This feature is known 
as ‘selective tripping’.
Accurate, equal load share is the number one characteristic to 
determine the integral quality and reliability of the parallel UPS 
system providing redundancy or increased capacity. With HotSync 
technology this is achieved without need for additional communi-
cations line between UPSs thus no single point of failure is added 
when introducing parallel modules to a system. From operational 
and also economical viewpoint, the achieved “close to perfect” 
reliability returns clear savings in the long run as every downtime 
incident is costly and might lead to unpredictable consequences.
Hot Sync technology allows full maintenance to be performed 
one-by-one on redundant UPS modules without an external main-
tenance bypass switch. The critical load does not need to be dis-
connected from the conditioned power. Scheduled or unscheduled 
maintenance can be performed with the load supported continu-
ously by the UPS-grade clean power.










