Electrical Systems Glossary: Terms and Definitions for Trade Professionals

Electrical trade work depends on precise, shared language — misread terminology in a panel schedule, load calculation, or inspection report can produce code violations, failed inspections, or hazardous installations. This glossary defines the core terms used across residential electrical systems, commercial electrical systems, and industrial electrical systems, covering equipment classifications, circuit concepts, protection devices, and code-referenced designations. Definitions are drawn from the National Electrical Code (NEC), NFPA standards, and NIST publications where applicable.


Definition and scope

An electrical systems glossary serves as a controlled vocabulary for the electrical trade — standardizing how installers, inspectors, engineers, and authority having jurisdiction (AHJ) personnel interpret specifications, permits, and compliance documentation. The scope of this glossary spans low-voltage through medium-voltage systems, covering both power distribution and control circuit terminology as defined primarily under NFPA 70 (National Electrical Code), published by the National Fire Protection Association.

Key classification boundaries within the glossary:

  1. Voltage tier — The NEC defines low voltage as systems operating at 50 volts or less (NFPA 70, 2023 edition, Article 100), while medium voltage typically spans 1,000 V to 35,000 V in utility and industrial contexts.
  2. System type — Terms differ meaningfully across single-phase electrical systems and three-phase electrical systems; a "balanced load" means something structurally different in each context.
  3. Circuit classification — The NEC distinguishes branch circuits, feeder circuits, and service conductors as discrete segments of a distribution system, each governed by separate article requirements.
  4. Equipment category — Switchgear, panelboards, and switchboards are distinct equipment classifications with separate listing and labeling requirements under UL standards.

How it works

Glossary terms in electrical work function as legally operative language within code documents, inspection checklists, and permit applications. When an AHJ references "available fault current" on a permit, that term carries a precise definition rooted in NEC Article 100 and IEEE standards — not a colloquial meaning. Understanding how terms interconnect is as important as knowing isolated definitions.

Core term clusters and their relationships:

Common scenarios

Trade professionals encounter terminology gaps most frequently in 4 recurring situations:

  1. Permit applications — Jurisdictions require specific terminology on electrical permits; "load center" and "panelboard" are not interchangeable in AHJ documentation, and misclassification can delay approval. The electrical system permitting process depends on accurate equipment identification.
  2. Load calculations — Terms like "demand factor," "diversity factor," and "connected load" are used in NEC Article 220 with precise mathematical definitions. Confusing connected load with calculated load produces undersized service equipment.
  3. Inspection reports — Inspectors cite violations using NEC article and section numbers. A citation referencing "luminaire support" under Article 410 requires understanding that "luminaire" replaced "fixture" in NEC terminology beginning with the 2002 edition.
  4. Equipment labeling and listing — UL listing, CSA certification, and equipment "listing" under NEC Article 110.3 have distinct legal meanings. An inspector who finds unlisted equipment at a service entrance will issue a citation regardless of the equipment's functional performance.

Decision boundaries

Selecting the correct term matters across 3 critical professional boundary conditions:

References

📜 6 regulatory citations referenced  ·  ✅ Citations verified Feb 27, 2026  ·  View update log

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