IEEE PC63.14/D3, Aug 2008
American National Draft Standard Dictionary of Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) Including Electromagnetic Environmental Effects (E3)
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Availability: Immediate Download
Language: English
License Type: Single User
Updates: Not Included
About This Item
PC63.14/D3, Aug 2008 is an American National Draft Standard Dictionary of Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) Including Electromagnetic Environmental Effects (E3) for the fields, waves, and electromagnetics domain. It is intended to define terminology used in EMC engineering, helping ensure that technical discussions, test reports, and design documents use consistent language. For teams working with interference, susceptibility, shielding, and environmental effects, this draft standard supports clearer communication and more reliable interpretation of requirements.
Overview of PC63.14/D3, Aug 2008
This standard, PC63.14/D3, Aug 2008, serves as a dictionary-style reference for EMC and E3 terms rather than a performance specification. In practical terms, it helps align meanings for concepts commonly used in electromagnetic compatibility work, including interactions between equipment and its electromagnetic environment. Because it is a draft standard, it is especially useful for reference and review activities where terminology consistency matters before requirements, testing language, or compliance documentation are finalized.
Typical use cases
PC63.14/D3, Aug 2008 is commonly used by engineers, technical writers, and compliance teams preparing EMC-related documents, test plans, or design reviews. It is relevant when working on systems that must control electromagnetic interference or operate reliably in challenging electromagnetic environments, such as communications hardware, control electronics, and other fielded equipment. The document may also support cross-functional teams that need a shared vocabulary for environmental effects, compatibility issues, and related engineering decisions.
Why it matters
Clear terminology reduces misunderstandings during design, procurement, and verification work. PC63.14/D3, Aug 2008 matters because EMC and E3 topics often involve subtle distinctions that affect how requirements are written and how results are interpreted. Using a consistent dictionary reference can improve documentation quality, support more dependable compliance reviews, and reduce the risk of mismatched expectations between suppliers, test laboratories, and engineering teams. That consistency is especially valuable in technical programs where electromagnetic behavior affects reliability.
- EMC and E3 terminology reference
- Draft standard for technical consistency
- Supports design, testing, and documentation
- Relevant to electromagnetic compatibility work
- English-language standard
- Publication Date: 2008
- Standard Status: Inactive
- Publisher: IEEE
- Subject: Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
- Official IEEE: Doi link
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