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  2. Power system protection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_system_protection

    Protection coordination is also handled through dividing the power system into protective zones. If a fault were to occur in a given zone, necessary actions will be executed to isolate that zone from the entire system. Zone definitions account for generators, buses, transformers, transmission and distribution lines, and motors. Additionally ...

  3. Protective relay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protective_relay

    Protective relays can also be classified by the type of measurement they make. [10]: 92 A protective relay may respond to the magnitude of a quantity such as voltage or current. Induction relays can respond to the product of two quantities in two field coils, which could for example represent the power in a circuit.

  4. Electrical fault - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrical_fault

    In power systems, protective devices can detect fault conditions and operate circuit breakers and other devices to limit the loss of service due to a failure. In a polyphase system, a fault may affect all phases equally, which is a "symmetric fault". If only some phases are affected, the resulting "asymmetric fault" becomes more complicated to ...

  5. Numerical relay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Numerical_relay

    The digital protective relay is a protective relay that uses a microprocessor to analyze power system voltages, currents or other process quantities for the purpose of detection of faults in an electric power system or industrial process system. A digital protective relay may also be called a "numeric protective relay".

  6. Power engineering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_engineering

    Power system protection is the study of the ways an electrical power system can fail, and the methods to detect and mitigate for such failures. In most projects, a power engineer must coordinate with many other disciplines such as civil and mechanical engineers, environmental experts, and legal and financial personnel.

  7. Contingency (electrical grid) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contingency_(electrical_grid)

    In an electrical grid, contingency is an unexpected failure of a single principal component (e.g., an electrical generator or a power transmission line) [1] that causes the change of the system state large enough to endanger the grid security. [2]

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  9. Selectivity (circuit breakers) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selectivity_(circuit_breakers)

    Selectivity, also known as circuit breaker discrimination, is the coordination of overcurrent protection devices so that a fault in the installation is cleared by the protection device located immediately upstream of the fault. The purpose of selectivity is to minimize the impact of a failure on the network.