Core Standards for Calibration of Online Power Quality Monitoring Devices
The calibration of online power quality monitoring devices follows a comprehensive standard system, encompassing mandatory national standards, industry technical specifications, international guidelines, and requirements for calibration methods and equipment. The following provides a structured overview with practical recommendations for real-world applications.
I. Core Domestic Standards
1. DL/T 1228-2023 – Technical Requirements and Test Methods for Online Power Quality Monitoring Devices
Status: Mandatory standard in China's power industry, replacing the 2013 edition, fully covering technical requirements, calibration methods, and testing procedures.
Key Provisions:
Calibration Interval: ≤3 years under normal conditions; shortened to 1–2 years in harsh environments (e.g., high EMI, high temperature/humidity) or when device performance is unstable.
Calibration Parameters: Voltage, current, frequency, harmonics (2nd–50th), interharmonics, flicker, three-phase unbalance, voltage sags/swells/interruptions. Calibration equipment must have accuracy better than 1/3 of the allowable error of the device under test (e.g., using a 0.05-class standard source).
Functional Verification: Data sampling cycle, communication stability (e.g., IEC 61850 compatibility), and alarm threshold accuracy must be validated.
Application: Calibration for monitoring devices in grid companies, power plants, and renewable energy grid-connection points.
2. GB/T 19862-2016 – General Requirements for Power Quality Monitoring Equipment
Role: National standard defining general technical requirements, including calibration methods, error limits, and environmental adaptability.
Key Requirements:
Measurement Accuracy: RMS voltage/current error ≤ ±0.5%, frequency error ≤ ±0.01 Hz, harmonic amplitude error ≤ ±2% (Class A devices).
Calibration Method: "Standard Source Injection Method" – comparing the output of a calibrated source with the device’s reading.
Application: Reference for equipment selection and calibration in industrial users and research institutions.
3. GB/T 14549-1993 – Power Quality: Harmonics in Public Power Systems
Role: Defines allowable harmonic voltage and current levels in public grids, and specifies accuracy requirements for harmonic measurement instruments.
Calibration Focus:
Harmonic Accuracy: A-class instruments require harmonic voltage error ≤ ±0.05% UN, current error ≤ ±0.15% IN. Must cover 2nd–50th harmonics.
Immunity Testing: Validate device stability under harmonic-rich conditions to ensure immunity to field interference.
Application: Harmonic mitigation projects and monitoring of industrial harmonic sources.
4. GB/T 17626 Series – Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) Testing
Environmental Robustness:
GB/T 17626.2-2018: Electrostatic discharge immunity (contact ±6kV, air ±8kV).
GB/T 17626.5-2019: Surge immunity (line-line ±2kV, line-earth ±4kV).
GB/T 17626.6-2008: Conducted RF immunity (0.15–80 MHz).
Calibration Significance: Ensures measurement stability under high EMI conditions, preventing data drift due to interference.
Application: Calibration of devices in substations and industrial environments with strong electromagnetic interference.
II. International Standards
1. IEC 61000-4 Series – EMC Testing
Global Relevance:
IEC 61000-4-2:2025: ESD immunity, includes guidance for wearable devices.
IEC 61000-4-6:2013: Conducted RF immunity (0.15–80 MHz), standardized interference injection.
Advantage: Enables international recognition of calibration results.
Application: Exported equipment and cross-border power projects.
2. IEC 62053-21:2020 – Electricity Metering Equipment – Part 21: Static Active Energy Meters (Classes 0.2S and 0.5S)
High-Accuracy Reference:
Error Limits: 0.2S class ≤ ±0.2%, 0.5S class ≤ ±0.5%.
Calibration Method: "Standard Meter Method" – comparing readings from a high-accuracy reference meter and the device under test.
Application: Trade settlement and high-precision research applications.
3. IEEE Std 1159-2019 – Guide for Monitoring Electric Power Quality
Technical Guidance:
Defines measurement methods and data logging requirements for sags, harmonics, flicker, etc.
Recommends the "Dual Standard Source Comparison Method" for cross-validation of device accuracy.
Application: Reference for monitoring devices in North America and international engineering projects.
III. Calibration Methods & Equipment Standards
1. JJF 1848-2020 – Calibration Specification for Power Quality Monitoring Equipment
Metrological Traceability: National technical specification requiring calibration equipment uncertainty ≤ 1/3 of the device’s allowable error.
Key Steps:
Visual inspection (labels, connectors).
Preheating (30 min) and factory reset.
Inject standard signals per DL/T 1228-2023.
Calculate expanded uncertainty and issue calibration certificate.
Application: Basis for calibration in metrology institutes and third-party labs.
2. JJG 597-2016 – Verification Regulation for AC Electrical Energy Meter Test Equipment
Equipment Benchmark:
0.05-class source: voltage/current error ≤ ±0.05%, power error ≤ ±0.05%.
Must support harmonic injection and phase adjustment.
Application: Selection and traceability of standard sources in calibration labs.
IV. Supplementary Standards for Special Scenarios
1. GB/T 24337-2009 – Power Quality: Interharmonics in Public Power Systems
Defines interharmonic voltage limits (e.g., ≤1.5% for 19th interharmonic in 10kV+ grids).
Validates measurement accuracy for non-integer harmonics (>50 Hz).
Application: Renewable integration and industrial sites with variable frequency drives.
2. Q/GDW 10 J393-2009 – Technical Specification for Online Power Quality Monitoring Devices
State Grid enterprise standard.
Requires data storage ≥31 days, PQDIF format support.
Validates data transmission accuracy (e.g., voltage deviation ≤ ±0.5%).
Application: Calibration within State Grid systems.
V. Calibration Process & Compliance Recommendations
Qualification Requirements: Calibration labs must hold CNAS accreditation or provincial metrology authorization for legally valid results.
Dynamic Calibration Strategy:
Standard interval: 3 years (per DL/T 1228-2023).
Shortened to 1 year in harsh environments (e.g., chemical, metallurgical plants) or if historical drift > ±5%.
Record Keeping:
Required: Calibration certificate, raw data, maintenance logs.
Legal value: Used for regulatory compliance and incident investigation.
VI. Standard Prioritization & Application Strategy
Domestic Projects: DL/T 1228-2023 + GB/T 19862-2016 + GB/T 14549-1993.
International Projects: IEC 61000 series + IEEE Std 1159-2019.
Special Cases:
Harmonics: GB/T 14549-1993 + GB/T 24337-2009.
EMC: GB/T 17626 + IEC 61000-4.
Summary
Calibration of online power quality monitoring devices must follow three principles: regulatory compliance, technical standardization, and scenario-specific adaptation. The core framework should be built on DL/T 1228-2023 and GB/T 19862-2016, enhanced by GB/T 14549-1993 and IEC 61000 for environmental robustness, and traceable via JJF 1848-2020. For specialized industries (e.g., renewables, healthcare), supplementary standards like GB/T 24337-2009 should be applied. The ultimate goal is accurate data, regulatory compliance, and international recognition.