Schneider Electric PM850 Manual De Usuario

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© 2011 Schneider Electric. All Rights Reserved.
63230-500-225A2
PowerLogic
TM
 Series 800 Power Meter
3/2011
Chapter 9—Disturbance Monitoring (PM870)
65
Chapter 9—Disturbance Monitoring (PM870)
This chapter provides background information about disturbance monitoring and describes 
how to use the PM870 to continuously monitor for disturbances on the current and voltage 
inputs. 
About Disturbance Monitoring
Momentary voltage disturbances are an increasing concern for industrial plants, hospitals, 
data centers, and other commercial facilities because modern equipment used in those 
facilities tends to be more sensitive to voltage sags, swells, and momentary interruptions. 
The power meter can detect these events by continuously monitoring and recording current 
and voltage information on all metered channels. Using this information, you can diagnose 
equipment problems resulting from voltage sags or swells and identify areas of 
vulnerability, enabling you to take corrective action. 
The interruption of an industrial process because of an abnormal voltage condition can 
result in substantial costs, which manifest themselves in many ways:
labor costs for cleanup and restart
lost productivity
damaged product or reduced product quality
delivery delays and user dissatisfaction
The entire process can depend on the sensitivity of a single piece of equipment. Relays, 
contactors, adjustable speed drives, programmable controllers, PCs, and data 
communication networks are all susceptible to power quality problems. After the electrical 
system is interrupted or shut down, determining the cause may be difficult.
Several types of voltage disturbances are possible, each potentially having a different 
origin and requiring a separate solution. A momentary interruption occurs when a protective 
device interrupts the circuit that feeds a facility. Swells and over-voltages can damage 
equipment or cause motors to overheat. Perhaps the biggest power quality problem is the 
momentary voltage sag caused by faults on remote circuits.
A voltage sag is a brief (1/2 cycle to 1 minute) decrease in rms voltage magnitude. A sag is 
typically caused by a remote fault somewhere on the power system, often initiated by a 
lightning strike. In Figure 9–1, the utility circuit breaker cleared the fault near plant D. The 
fault not only caused an interruption to plant D, but also resulted in voltage sags to plants A, 
B, and C.
NOTE: The PM870 is able to detect sag and swell events less than 1/2 cycle duration. 
However, it may be impractical to have setpoints more sensitive than 10% for voltage and 
current fluctuations.