High levels of harmonics in an electrical system can be responsible for flickering lights, IT equipment crashing unexpectedly, the nuisance tripping of circuit protective devices, motors to run noisily, and cables and transformers to run hotter than they should. Apart from the inconvenience, and potential costly early failure of equipment that these issues may cause, in almost every case they are also accompanied by a reduction in energy efficiency.
In the past, harmonics were usually an issue only for electrical installations in large factories, but now they’re everywhere, and no business owner or facility manager can afford to ignore them.
But what are harmonics, where do they come from, why have they become such a problem, and what can be done about them?
Ideally, the voltage and current waveforms in an installation would be perfectly sinusoidal, and this would not be too difficult to achieve if all the loads connected to the power system were linear – that is, the loads where the current drawn from the supply is always proportional to the applied voltage. Simple heaters and incandescent lamps are examples of linear loads, and until the last few decades of the 20th century, loads were predominantly of this type.