IEEE defined power quality disturbances into seven categories based on wave shape:
1. Transients
2. Interruptions
3. Sag/ Under voltage
4. Swell/ Overvoltage
5. Waveform distortion
6. Voltage fluctuations
7. Frequency variations
1. TRANSIENTS
Potentially the most damaging type of power disturbance, transients fall into two subcategories:1. Impulsive
2. Oscillatory
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2. INTERRUPTIONS
An interruption is defined as the complete loss of supply voltage or load current. Depending on its duration, an interruption is categorized as instantaneous, momentary, temporary, or sustained. more »3. SAG/ UNDERVOLTAGE
A sag is a reduction of AC voltage at a given frequency for the duration of 0.5 cycles to 1 minute’s time. Sags are usually caused by system faults, and are also often the result of switching on loads with heavy startup currents. more »4. SWELL/ OVERVOLTAGE
A swell is the reverse form of a sag, having an increase in AC voltage for a duration of 0.5 cycles to 1 minute’s time. For swells, high-impedance neutral connections, sudden (especially large) load reductions, and a single-phase fault on a three-phase system are common sources. more »5. WAVEFORM DISTORTION
There are five primary types of waveform distortion:1. DC offset
2. Harmonics
3. Interharmonics
4. Notching
5. Noise
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