Advanced Power Studies Contact Us
APS Test & Commissioning

Power Quality Measurement, Analysis & Compliance

APS provides specialist power quality measurement, monitoring, analysis and reporting for commercial, industrial, renewable energy, EV charging, data centre and utility-connected installations — identifying disturbance sources, verifying compliance with recognised limits and supporting practical mitigation to improve reliability, efficiency and equipment performance.

LV / MV / HVPower quality surveys, monitoring and compliance assessment.
Power Quality Measurement, Analysis & Compliance Services
Class A · Harmonics · Flicker · Dips & Swells · Transients
Service Scope

Power Quality Measurement, Analysis & Compliance

Specialist LV, MV and HV power quality surveys, long-term monitoring and standards-based compliance assessment — Class A measurement per IEC 61000-4-30, covering harmonics, flicker, voltage events, unbalance, transients and supraharmonics, with reporting against EN 50160, IEEE Std 519 and applicable utility criteria.

Overview

Modern electrical networks are increasingly shaped by non-linear loads, inverter-based generation, variable-speed drives, EV chargers, UPS systems, power electronics, transformer energisation and capacitor switching, alongside sensitive digital infrastructure. These conditions introduce harmonic and interharmonic distortion, voltage unbalance, flicker, voltage dips, swells and interruptions, rapid voltage changes, transient overvoltages and excessive neutral currents. Left unassessed, these disturbances lead to nuisance tripping, equipment overheating, insulation stress, premature failure, maloperation of protection devices and reduced system availability.

Power quality problems are rarely the consequence of a single source. More commonly, they result from the cumulative effect of multiple non-linear loads sharing a common network impedance, or from the interaction between the internal installation and the supply network. A voltage dip at a sensitive piece of equipment may originate in the distribution network, in the LV installation, in a switched load elsewhere on the same busbar, or in a combination of all three. Accurately identifying the source — and the relative contribution of supply-side and installation-side factors — is essential to selecting a technically effective and cost-proportionate response.

APS supports clients through site-based power quality surveys, short-term troubleshooting measurements and long-term monitoring using advanced Class A three-phase power quality analysers. Measurements capture voltage, current, frequency, power, energy, harmonic and interharmonic distortion, supraharmonics, flicker, unbalance, transients, inrush current, waveform deviation and time-stamped event records. The assessment is aligned with IEC 61000-4-30 Class A measurement methods, EN 50160 supply voltage characteristics, IEEE Std 519 harmonic limits and IEC 61000-2-2 compatibility levels, together with applicable utility, grid code and client-specific requirements.

APS converts raw measurement data into clear technical conclusions. The deliverable is a defensible technical position — not simply a collection of logged values — establishing whether a problem originates in the supply network, the internal installation, connected equipment, a specific switching event or the interaction between multiple power electronic systems, and setting out what needs to be done about it.

Measurement Approach

IEC 61000-4-30 defines the measurement methods, aggregation intervals and uncertainty requirements for power quality parameters and classifies instruments into performance classes. Class A instruments meet the most stringent specification for measurement accuracy, time synchronisation and uncertainty, and their results are accepted for contractual and compliance purposes — including evidence submitted to network operators, national regulators and dispute resolution. APS uses Class A instruments to ensure that measurement results are technically defensible and accepted by all parties without qualification.

For compliance assessment against EN 50160, a minimum monitoring window of one week under normal operating conditions is required, with measurements aggregated at 10-minute intervals for the principal supply voltage parameters. For troubleshooting and event investigation, shorter surveys may be used, supplemented by triggered cycle-by-cycle event capture. For emission assessment, connection agreement compliance or contractual dispute purposes, the monitoring duration and aggregation are agreed against the applicable standard or network operator requirement.

Simultaneous three-phase measurements typically capture: true RMS voltage and current; frequency; active power, reactive power and power factor; harmonic and interharmonic voltages and currents to at least the 50th order; total harmonic distortion (THD) and total demand distortion (TDD); supraharmonics up to 30 kHz where required; short-term flicker severity (Pst) and long-term flicker severity (Plt); voltage and current unbalance; voltage dips, swells and interruptions with residual voltage and duration; rapid voltage changes; transient overvoltages; inrush current profiles; and time-stamped waveform captures for triggered events.

Instrument placement is selected to ensure the measurement captures conditions relevant to the investigation or compliance requirement — typically at the point of common coupling, at the equipment under assessment, or at intermediate busbars where multiple disturbance sources may interact. For complex installations, simultaneous measurements at multiple points permit source attribution and assess how disturbances propagate through the network.

Key Services

The measurement scope is tailored to the project requirement and may cover a single disturbance category for a focused investigation or the full parameter set for a comprehensive compliance survey.

  • Power quality site surveys and baseline monitoring — short-term survey or long-term continuous logging More info
  • Troubleshooting surveys with triggered event capture for unexplained equipment malfunction, overheating or nuisance shutdowns More info
  • Harmonic and interharmonic distortion assessment — individual harmonic orders, THD, TDD and spectrum analysis More info
  • Supraharmonic assessment up to 30 kHz for inverter-based generation, EV chargers and power electronics More info
  • Neutral current and harmonic loading assessment — earth fault risk, overloading and third-harmonic circulation More info
  • Waveform deviation, notching and rapid voltage change assessment More info
  • Voltage dip, swell and interruption analysis — residual voltage, duration, frequency of occurrence and comparison against EN 50160 and contractual limits More info
  • Flicker and voltage fluctuation assessment — Pst and Plt severity values and fluctuating load identification More info
  • Voltage and current unbalance assessment — negative and zero sequence components and source identification More info
  • Transient overvoltage and switching-event investigation — capacitor switching, transformer energisation and motor starting More info
  • Inrush current profiling and nuisance-tripping root-cause investigation More info
  • Power factor, reactive power and load-profile assessment More info
  • Energy loss and inefficient power-flow assessment More info
  • Compliance review against EN 50160, IEEE Std 519 and IEC-based limits with pass/fail evidence and statistical summary More info
  • Practical mitigation recommendations — harmonic filtering, load balancing, power factor correction, protection-setting review and operational improvement More info

Standards & Applicable Codes

Measurements, analysis and compliance assessments are carried out against the principal international standards, applicable grid code and utility requirements, and any project-specific criteria agreed with the client or network operator.

  • IEC 61000-4-30 — Testing and measurement techniques: power quality measurement methods (Class A and Class S instrument performance)
  • EN 50160 — Voltage characteristics of electricity supplied by public distribution systems
  • IEEE Std 519 — Recommended practice and requirements for harmonic control in electric power systems
  • IEC 61000-2-2 — Compatibility levels for low-frequency conducted disturbances and signalling in public low-voltage power supply systems
  • IEC 61000-2-4 — Compatibility levels in industrial plants for low-frequency conducted disturbances
  • IEC 61000-3-6 — Assessment of emission limits for the connection of distorting installations to MV, HV and EHV power systems
  • IEC 61000-3-7 — Assessment of emission limits for the connection of fluctuating installations to MV, HV and EHV power systems
  • IEC 61000-3-2 / 3-3 — Limits for harmonic current emissions and voltage fluctuation and flicker for equipment connected to the public supply
  • Grid code and distribution code power quality requirements applicable to the connection point and asset type
  • DNO / network operator supply quality requirements, connection agreements and metering specifications
  • Client and project-specific power quality acceptance criteria and contractual requirements

Typical Applications

The service is particularly relevant for installations with non-linear, switching or power-electronic-intensive loads, and for any site where compliance evidence is required for a connection agreement, contractual dispute or network operator acceptance.

  • Renewable generation plants — solar PV, wind and hybrid installations with inverter-based generation
  • Battery energy storage systems and grid-scale BESS connection points
  • EV charging infrastructure — rapid DC chargers, fleet charging and high-density installations
  • Data centres and mission-critical facilities with UPS and server load
  • Industrial drives, large motors, arc furnaces and heavy-load manufacturing facilities
  • Transformers, capacitor banks and harmonic filter installations
  • UPS systems, standby generation and dynamic UPS
  • Grid connection substations and points of common coupling requiring network operator acceptance evidence
  • Sites with unexplained, repeated or intermittent electrical disturbances
  • Pre-connection baseline surveys for new loads or generation connecting to an existing network
  • Post-mitigation verification to confirm that a filtering or correction measure has been effective

Deliverables

The scope of reporting is agreed with the client at the outset and adapted to the purpose of the measurement — whether a brief troubleshooting note, a compliance submission or a full power quality management report.

  • Measurement setup documentation — instrument configuration, placement, monitoring duration and calibration reference
  • Trend plots and time-series charts for voltage, current, frequency, power and harmonic parameters over the monitoring period
  • Harmonic spectrum profiles — individual voltage and current harmonic orders, THD, TDD and spectral analysis
  • Event summaries for voltage dips, swells, interruptions and transients with magnitude, duration and time stamps
  • Flicker severity values (Pst and Plt) and voltage fluctuation assessment
  • Compliance assessment against applicable standards with statistical summary and pass/fail evidence
  • Root-cause findings — supply-side versus installation-side attribution and identified contributing equipment or events
  • Identified risks and prioritised corrective-action recommendations with supporting technical justification
  • Practical mitigation options — technology, sizing basis, expected improvement and implementation considerations

Technical Value

APS combines field measurement, standards-based interpretation and engineering judgement to give clients a defensible technical position on power quality — not merely a data set. The distinction matters: a report that records 500 hours of waveform data without explaining what the data means, which limits apply, whether they are exceeded, and what should be done about it, does not give a client the evidence they need to make decisions or to satisfy a network operator.

Identifying whether a power quality problem is supply-side or installation-side in origin determines who is responsible for the remedy, what the appropriate mitigation is, and how it should be specified. A harmonic problem sourced in the supply network requires a different response from one sourced in on-site drives or chargers. A voltage dip caused by network faults cannot be mitigated by on-site filtering — it requires ride-through capability or a UPS. Misattributing the source leads to expenditure on the wrong remedy and persistence of the original problem.

By measuring at the right points in the installation, for the right duration, with calibrated Class A instruments, and interpreting the results against the applicable limits and the engineering context of the site, APS helps clients distinguish supply-side from installation-side issues, demonstrate compliance to network operators, target mitigation where it will be effective, and move from unexplained symptoms to a clear, evidence-based engineering conclusion.

For compliance submissions to DNOs and network operators, Class A measurement results reported against EN 50160 or IEEE Std 519 provide the level of technical evidence expected by network operators and, where required, by regulators and dispute resolution processes. The measurement and reporting methodology is documented to support the integrity and traceability of the evidence.