Arduino Base Over Voltage and Under Voltage Protection Circuit LITERATURE REVIEW
Arduino Base Over Voltage and Under Voltage Protection Circuit LITERATURE REVIEW
1.0 INTRODUCTION
Voltage monitoring system with high and low alarm is a device designed to protect electrical
appliances from over voltage as well as under voltage. The under/over voltage protection
circuit which is presented in this work is a low cost and reliable circuit for protecting such
equipment’s from damages. Whenever the power line is switched on it gets connected to
the appliance only after a delay of a fixed time. If there is high/low fluctuations beyond
sets limits the appliance get disconnected. This voltage protection circuit is designed to
develop a low-voltage and high-voltage tripping mechanism to protect a load from any
damage. In many of the homes and industries fluctuations in AC mains supply take place
frequently. The electronic devices get easily damaged due to fluctuations. To overcome this
This work provides few circuit ideas that can provide low voltage and over voltage
protection to connected electrical assets. Though these circuits won’t be able to stabilize the
input voltage, even so may prove very effective in providing total safety to your precious
The first design of a low voltage indicator circuit may be used to indicate the presence of
A low voltage may appear to be something that is lower in magnitude and power, but that
is what makes it more lethal. For example a refrigerator working at 230 volts AC mains will
never “like” voltages below 190 or above 230vac, since in such cases its compressor due
to the lack of sufficient voltage, will try to compensate by drawing heavy currents and
may get damaged if the situation persists. The same is true for other types of AC operated
motors.
Also in vehicles, for example a car, if the battery voltage falls below 9 volts, it may be quite
harmful for the life of the battery itself and moreover the vehicle will just not start at that
voltage.
In the era of development, advancement and pace we attained efficiency, mobility, flexibility
and comfort but we need safe guard as well as. We, as students of electrical side has thus
got motivation to design such a system that ensures protection of different electrical
junctions and aware us even if we are distant from devices in uncustomary fashion.
The gradual developing rate of accidents because of electrical overflow is alarming for
Nigerian. This project physically gives us little hope to advance a bit for protection of devices
Provide a solution to under voltage and over situation faced by residents of high density
voltage stabilizer which will have a cost price of less than total cost obtained which
To regulate the voltage of there is any over voltage or under voltage an regulate the
voltage that will suit the purpose the analysis design, construction and cost
comparison have been done and necessary tests have been satisfactory out.
1.4 PURPOSE OF THE PROJECT
The main purpose of this work is to ensure adequate protection for home appliances against
As a student of electrical and electronic engineering, working on this project have expose
understand the working principle and application of voltage monitoring system with high
One unique advantage of this system is that it notify the user via alarm whenever dangerous
voltage is present.
High or low voltage in electricity is one of the major problems that affect their production.
Due to high demand of electricity to sustain their operations, it results to low or high voltage
output which can damage equipments. Therefore, these companies need specialized devices to
help them protect their equipments from early wear and tear. High-And-Low Voltage Cut-Out
is an electromechanical constituents that control the regular voltage outputs. During peak
consumption of electricity, the sudden flow of power can damage electric or electronic machines.
On the other hand, if there is low output of voltage, a machine may fail to function. It provide
safe output to guard varieties of equipments including ultra modernized music systems,
medical equipments LCD, Home Theater, industrial machines and more. They are designed
with special features to protect equipments which include line noise spike protection, primary
switching technology, auto reset, and overload cutoff protection. In order to preserve the life of
machines, these devices are recommendable in any operation. They assure that machines are
working well all the time especially in peak timings. This device is used in Industrial
machinery House hold items like TV, refrigerator, AC Agriculture Motors and Water pumps.
This straight forward circuit will protect electrical appliances from over voltage as well as
under voltage. An ideal circuit for home to protect your valuable equipments from voltage
fluctuations. The same circuit with some modifications can be used to make a automatic
voltage stabilizer.
This device was built around an arduino microcontroller. The inclusion of op amps
makes the circuit operations much accurate and tripping points adjustable to any levels as
desired by the user. The LCD is used to display the status of the device.
CHAPTER TWO
LITERATURE REVIEW
2.1 OVERVOLTAGE
A Overvoltage is defined as an increase in the r.m.s. value of the voltage up to a level between
1.1 pu to 1.8 pu at power frequency for periods ranging from a half cycle to a minute as shown in
fig 2.1
Overvoltages are less common than under voltage but they also arise due to system
faults. Overvoltage can occur due to single line to ground fault, which in turn will raise the
voltage of the other phases. It can also cause due to disconnection of heavy industrial loads or
switching on the capacitor banks. This is generally due to ungrounded or floating ground delta
systems, where a change in ground reference would give voltage rise to the ungrounded system.
Causes of overvoltage are mainly due to energization of capacitor bank. It can also be generated
by sudden load deduction. Due to the disconnection of load there is a sudden reduction of
current, which will give rise the voltage, where L is the inductance of the line. The effects of
overvoltage are more severe and destructive. It may cause the electrical equipment to fail, due to
overheating caused by high voltage. Also electronic and other sensitive equipment are prone to
Open neutral connections in 120/240-V customer installations can occur and have been reported
• When the neutral wire of a separate-conductor service drop is broken by falling branches
or Icing
transformer and the system capacitance. A common form of ferroresonance occurs during single
transformers because of the high capacitance of the cables. The transformer connection is also
ferroresonance. During single phasing (usually when line crews energize or de-energize the
transformer with single-phase cutouts at the cable riser pole), a ferroresonant circuit between the
cable capacitance and the transformer’s magnetizing reactance drives voltages to as high as five
per unit on the open legs of the transformer. The voltage waveform is normally distorted and
Figure 2.1.2 Ferroresonant Circuit with a Cable-Fed Transformer with an Ungrounded High-
Occasionally, over voltages occur because of the malfunction or misapplication of utility voltage
regulation Equipment.
controller.
Faults from transmission circuits to distribution circuits are another hazard that can subject
distribution equipment and customer equipment to extremely high voltages. Consider the
example in Fig 2.1.2 of a fault from a sub-transmission circuit to a distribution circuit. As is the
case for primary-to-secondary faults discussed in the previous circuit, overvoltage’s are not
extremely high as long as the distribution circuit stays connected (just like the primary to
secondary faults discussed in the previous section). But if a distribution interrupter opens the
circuit, the voltage on the faulted distribution conductor jumps to the full transmission-line
voltage. With voltage at several times normal, something will fail quickly. Such a severe
overvoltage is also likely to damage end-use equipment. The distribution interrupter, either a
circuit breaker or recloser, may not be able to clear the fault (the recovery voltage is many times
the fault location. Current flowing back towards the circuit causes a voltage rise along the
circuit.
Under voltage is defined as a sudden drop in the root mean square (r.m.s.) voltage and is usually
characterized by the remaining (retained) voltage. Under voltage is thus, short duration reduction
in r.m.s. voltage, caused mainly by short circuits, starting of large motors and equipment failures.
Under voltages are the most common power disturbance whose effect is quite severe especially
in industrial and large commercial customers such as the damage of the sensitivity equipment’s
and loss of daily productions and finances. The examples of the sensitive equipment’s are
Programmable Logic Controller (PLC), Adjustable Speed Drive (ASD) and Chiller control.
Under voltage at the equipment terminal can be due to a short circuit fault hundreds of
There are various causes for which under voltages are created in system voltage (Manish Paul et
al., 2015).
Closing and Opening of Circuit Breakers: When the circuit breaker of a phase is opened
suddenly, then the line which it is feeding will be temporarily disconnected. The other
feeder lines from the same substation system will act as an under voltage.
Due to Fault: Under voltage due to fault can be critical to the operation of a power plant.
The magnitude of under voltage can be equal in each phase or unequal respectively and it
Due to Motor Starting: Under voltage due to motor starting are symmetrical
o since the induction motors are balanced three phase loads, this will draw approximately the
Due to Transformer Energizing: There are mainly two causes of under voltage due to
transformer energizing. One is normal system operations which include manual energizing
of a transformer and another is the reclosing actions. These under voltages are
unsymmetrical in nature.
voltages. A line to ground fault occurs when lightning strikes the line and continues to
ground.
Pollution: Flash over takes place when there is storm in the coastal regions, where the
power line is covered with salt. This salt formation acts as a good conductor of electricity
Construction Activity: Generally all power lines are undergrounded in urban areas,
digging for doing foundation work of buildings can cause damage to underground cables
According to Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE) Recommended Practice for
Monitoring Electric Power Quality,” IEEE Std. 1159-1995, June 1995, Power quality is defined
as “The concept of powering and grounding sensitive electronic equipment in a manner suitable
for the equipment”. In the last few decade power quality has become an important issue since
many equipments are semiconductor based and controlling is done with power electronic
equipments. All the equipments were heating, lighting and motors, which were not very sensitive
to voltage variation. In the past the term reliability and quality was same as because there were
no power electronic equipments and all the equipments were linear in nature Causes of Power
Quality Problem.
Some common disturbances which may cause power quality problems are listed below:
In systems where overhead lines are predominant, natural phenomena are responsible for the
alighting stroke is a transient increase in the voltage along the line. However, an arc is created
between the phase hit by the stroke and ground and consequently the voltage is depressed to
zero. When unbalanced loading is done on a system it causes an unbalance voltage in the phases,
which ultimately creates power quality problem. This unbalance voltage increases rotor heating
due to negative sequence magnetic flux generated in the stator winding. The main cause of
power quality problem is the short circuit fault occurring in the distribution side. This short
circuit can cause a huge increase in the system current and consequently a large voltage drop in
1. Resistive Load
The design of hardware for resistive load is done by connecting a bulb of 50 Watt. The bulb
glows in the limit of 150V to 230V. If the voltage goes down below 150V then it is a case of
under voltage and if it exceeds 230V than it is a condition of over voltage. The limits of
operating voltage can be changed using the two potentiometers connected in the hardware. . So
the relay allows the supply voltage to be fed to the load (Manish Paul et al., 2015).
2. Capacitive Load
The design of hardware for capacitive load is done by connecting a capacitor of 2.50µF±5%. The
LED glows in the limit of 148V to 200V. If the voltage goes down below 148V then it is a case
The limits of operating voltage can be changed using the two potentiometers connected in the
3. Inductive Load
The design of hardware for inductive load is done by connecting a choke coil. The LED glows in
the limit of 148V to 230V. If the voltage goes down below 148V then it is a case of under
voltage and if it exceeds 230V than it is a condition of over voltage. The limits of operating
voltage can be changed using the two potentiometers connected in the hardware (Manish Paul et
al., 2015).
Over and under voltage protection circuit protects refrigerator, IM and other electrical appliances
from abnormal voltage conditions. Our project aims to build system that monitors voltage and
provides breakpoint based low and high voltage tripping mechanism that avoids any damage to
the load, various industrial and domestic systems consist of fluctuation in the AC mains. In
tripping system a quad comparator IC is used with two more comparator to be used as window
comparator to it. When system deliver error the input voltage falls out of the window range. This
trigger then operates a relay that cut off the load to avoid any damage to it. The lamp is used as
load
Table 2.5.1: Different voltage condition [2]
3. Agriculture Motors
4. Water pumps
1. Highly sensitive
This part consist of the about mitigation techniques over abnormal conditions like Overvoltage,
The controlled ferroresonant technology utilizes a special power transformer that employs a
secondary tank circuit. The primary and secondary of this transformer are magnetically coupled
through magnetic shunts. The amount of steel and air gap of these shunts controls the amount of
magnetic coupling between the primary and secondary providing an inherent output current
limiting.
The secondary of the ferroresonant transformer consists of a tank circuit that is resonated by a
high voltage winding and capacitors. This tank circuit keeps the magnetic flux of the secondary
in saturation. The effect of the saturated secondary is inherent voltage regulation (an open
feedback loop regulator) and loads on the secondary are not linearly reflected back to primary.
secondary windings in the power transformer design also provide excellent attenuation to
incoming transient voltages that may be present on the AC. line. Metal Oxide Varistors are used
in the La Marche ferroresonant product lines to provide additional protection for sensitive
The typical efficiency of ferroresonant units with single phase AC. input is 75% and is
approximately 85% for three phase inputs. The power factors for either input are typically over
0.9. Power factors that approach 1.0 usually indicate low input harmonic distortion. Although the
power factor does not affect efficiencies, higher power factors lower the AC input current
In our practical life voltage may be high or low for purpose of electricity supply system or for
the weakness of supply system or for other causes. For that reason, many important electric
machine or electric equipment may destroy. In order to save these we need to use the voltage
regulator. The voltage regulator may be manually or automatically controlled. The voltage can
regulator. In manual control, the output voltage is sensed with a voltmeter connected at the
output; the decision and correcting operation is made by a human being. The manual control may
not always be feasible due to various factors and the accuracy, which can be obtained, depending
on the degree of instrument and giving much better performance so far as stability. In modern
large interconnected system, manual regulation is not feasible and therefore automatic voltage
Contactor coils are devices which have traditionally been susceptible to voltage sags. In some
cases, the loss of a single contactor can lead to the loss of a whole production line even if all of
the other equipment is immune to the voltage sag. A change to the contractor circuit or type can
be a very simple and cost effective method of voltage sag mitigation. Coil hold-in devices are
one such mitigation method. These devices are connected between the AC supply and the
contactor and can generally allow a contactor to remain energized for voltage sags down to 25 %
retained voltage.
Uninterruptable power supplies (UPS) mitigate voltage sags by supplying the load using stored
energy. Upon detection of voltage sag, the load is transferred from the mains supply to the UPS.
Obviously, the capacity of load that can be supplied is directly proportional to the amount of
energy storage available. UPS systems have the advantage that they can mitigate all voltage sags
including outages for significant periods of time (depending on the size of the UPS).
Fig. 2.6.2: Block Diagram of Off-Line UPS
There are 2 topologies of UPS available; on-line and off-line. Fig. 2.6.2 shows a schematic of an
off-line UPS while Fig. 2.6.3 shows a schematic of an on-line UPS. Comparison of the figures
shows that the difference between the two systems is that for an on-line UPS the load is always
supplied by the UPS, while for off-line systems; the load is transferred from the mains supply to
the UPS by a static changeover switch upon detection of voltage sag. The lack of a changeover
switch renders the on-line system more reliable as any failure of the changeover switch will
result in the off-line UPS being ineffective. UPS systems have disadvantages related to energy
storage components (mostly batteries) which must be maintained and replaced periodically.
Small UPS systems are relatively simple and cheap. However, large units are complex and
highly expensive due to the need for large energy storage capacities.
Flywheel systems use the energy stored in the inertia of a rotating flywheel to mitigate voltage
sags. In the most basic system, a flywheel is coupled in series with a motor and a generator
which in turn is connected in series with the load. The flywheel is accelerated to a very high
speed and when voltage sag occurs, the rotational energy of the decelerating flywheel is utilized
to supply the load. Flywheel storage systems are effective for mitigation of all voltage sags
including interruptions and can supply the load for a significant period of time (up to several
seconds depending on the size of the flywheel). Fig. 2.6.4 shows the basic principle of the
Figure 2.6.4 Basic Flywheel Motor Generator Configuration (Math and Bollen, 2000)
Flywheels have maintenance and reliability advantages over other energy storage systems such
as batteries. However, if large energy storage capacities are required, flywheels must be large
and are heavy. Further, the configuration shown in Fig. 2.6.4 will have high losses during normal
operation. A number of solutions have been proposed to overcome this issue and most involve
the inclusion of power electronics into the system. Such a solution is presented in Fig. 2.6.5. In
this configuration, the motor which drives the flywheel is connected through a variable speed
drive. This connection arrangement results in better starting characteristics for the flywheel and
efficiency gains for the motor. Connection of the AC generator to a voltage source converter as
shown increases the amount of energy that can be extracted from the flywheel due to the fact that
the converter is able to produce a constant DC voltage, which may then be used directly or
Dynamic Voltage Restorers (DVR) are complicated static devices which work by adding the
‘missing’ voltage during a voltage sag. Basically this means that the device injects voltage into
the system in order to bring the voltage back up to the level required by the load. Injection of
series with the load. There are two types of DVRs available; those with and without energy
storage. Devices without energy storage are able to correct the voltage waveform by drawing
additional current from the supply. Devices with energy storage use the stored energy to correct
The difference between a DVR with storage and a UPS is that the DVR only
supplies the part of the waveform that has been reduced due to the voltage sag, not the whole
waveform. In addition, DVRs generally cannot operate during interruptions. Fig. 2.6.6 shows a
schematic of a DVR. As can be seen the basic DVR consists of an injection/booster transformer,
a harmonic filter, a voltage source converter (VSC) and a control system (Chellali and Brahim,
2008)
A SVC is a shunt connected power electronics based device which works by injecting reactive
current into the load, thereby supporting the voltage and mitigating the voltage sag. SVCs may
or may not include energy storage, with those systems which include storage being capable of
mitigating deeper and longer voltage sags. Fig. 2.6.7 shows a block diagram of a SVC [10].
Figure 2.6.7 Block Diagram of SVC
Sag proofing transformers, also known as voltage sag compensators, are basically a multi-
winding transformer connected in series with the load. These devices use static switches to
change the transformer turns ratio to compensate for the voltage sag. Sag proofing transformers
are effective for voltage sags to approximately 40 % retained voltage. Fig. 2.6.8 shows a block
diagram of a sag proofing transformer. Sag proofing transformers have the advantage of being
basically maintenance free and do not have the problems associated with energy storage
components. A disadvantage is that at this stage, sag proofing transformers are only available for
relatively small loads of up to approximately 5 kVA. With the transformer connected in series,
the system also adds to losses and any failure of the transformer will lead to an immediate loss of
supply.
Figure 2.6.8 Block Diagram of Sag Proofing Transformer
For facilities with a dual supply, one possible method of voltage sag mitigation is through the
use of a static transfer switch. Upon detection of voltage sag, these devices can transfer the load
from the normal supply feeder to the alternative supply feeder within half a cycle. The
effectiveness of this switching operation is highly dependent on how independent of each other
the 2 supply feeders are and the location of the event leading to the voltage sag.
Ideally, with a dual feeder supply, the 2 feeders should be supplied by different substations.
Obviously, there are significant costs associated with dual supplies even if they are available.