What Is a VFD?

A Variable Frequency Drive (VFD) — also called an adjustable-speed drive (ASD), variable-speed drive (VSD), or inverter — is an electronic power conversion device that controls the speed and torque of an AC induction motor by varying the frequency and voltage of the power supplied to the motor. By running a motor at the exact speed needed rather than full speed, VFDs deliver dramatic energy savings and improved process control.

How a VFD Works

A VFD converts incoming AC power through three stages:

1. Rectifier (AC → DC) — The incoming AC power (e.g., 480V, 60 Hz) is rectified to DC by a diode bridge or active rectifier. The result is a high-voltage DC bus (typically around 680V DC for a 480V input).

2. DC Bus (Energy Storage) — Large electrolytic capacitors on the DC bus smooth the rectified voltage and store energy, providing a stable DC source for the inverter stage.

3. Inverter (DC → Variable AC) — IGBTs (Insulated Gate Bipolar Transistors) switch the DC bus voltage on and off at high frequency using Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) to synthesize a variable-frequency, variable-voltage AC output waveform. By controlling the switching frequency and duty cycle, the inverter produces an effective AC output ranging from 0 to the input frequency (and sometimes beyond for field-weakening operation).

The motor sees a PWM waveform that approximates a sine wave at the commanded frequency. The motor's speed follows the output frequency: for a 4-pole motor at 60 Hz, synchronous speed is 1,800 RPM; at 30 Hz, it runs at 900 RPM.

The Affinity Laws: Why VFDs Save Energy

For centrifugal loads (fans and pumps), the Affinity Laws describe the relationship between speed and power:

  • Flow (Q) varies proportionally to speed: Q₂/Q₁ = N₂/N₁
  • Pressure/Head (H) varies as the square of speed: H₂/H₁ = (N₂/N₁)²
  • Power (P) varies as the cube of speed: P₂/P₁ = (N₂/N₁)³

The cube relationship means reducing a fan to 80% speed reduces power consumption to just 51% (0.8³ = 0.512). Reducing to 50% speed reduces power to only 12.5%. This is why VFDs on HVAC fans and chilled water pumps can reduce energy consumption by 30–60% in typical building applications.

Key VFD Specifications

  • HP/kW rating — must match or exceed the motor nameplate rating
  • Input voltage and phases — 208V, 240V, 480V single- or three-phase
  • Overload capability — constant torque loads need 150% for 60 seconds; variable torque (fan/pump) loads need 110% for 60 seconds
  • IP/NEMA enclosure rating — IP20/NEMA 1 for clean indoor; IP65/NEMA 4X for washdown environments
  • Communication — Modbus RTU, EtherNet/IP, PROFIBUS, or BACnet for SCADA integration

VFD Installation Considerations

Output filters — VFD output PWM waveforms produce voltage spikes (dV/dt) that can damage motor winding insulation, especially on long cable runs (over 50–100 feet for standard motors). Use inverter-duty motors (NEMA MG1 Part 31) and add an output dV/dt filter or sine wave filter when cable lengths exceed the drive manufacturer's recommendations.

Input line reactor — VFDs draw non-sinusoidal current from the power system, injecting harmonic distortion. A 3–5% impedance input line reactor reduces harmonic current injection and protects the VFD from voltage spikes. Recommended on all VFD installations larger than 5 HP.

Bypass — Critical HVAC and process loads often have manual or automatic bypass contactors, allowing the motor to run directly across the line if the VFD fails. Design the bypass around the drive, not through it.