Voltage unbalance mitigation:
Consider 3 transformers in a wye delta bank.The primary neutral is connected to the source.
The secondaries are connected in delta.
Draw a vector sketch of the delta voltages.
This will be an equilateral triangle.
Now reduce the voltage on one primary phase.
The corresponding vector on the delta side will be shortened.
As a result, the delta will not close, there will be a gap representing the percentage voltage difference of the primary phase.
But how can that be? It is a bolted connection.
The voltage represented by the gap in the vector diagram causes a current to circulate in the delta.
The current is limited by three times the single phase impedance, or by the sum of the impedances of the three transformers.
The circulating current is equal in each transformer and so the back EMF developed by the circulating current is equal.
But, the higher voltage phase will inject power into the delta and the lower voltage phases will deliver power back into the grid.
That is a "Wye

elta for Dummies" explanation.
The extra current on the high phases will cause extra line loss and act to drop the supplied voltage.
The less current or reverse current on the lower voltage phases will reduce line voltage drop.
But wait! Different voltages don't transfer real power, they cause or transfer reactive power.
Moving on from the "Wye

elta for Dummies" explanation, look at the vector sketch of the delta.
With one vector shorter, this is no longer an equilateral triangle.
As a result the phase angle are no longer equal.
It is this phase shift that causes the real power to be transferred from one phase to another.
The wye:delta (and the back EMF of induction motors) both act to oppose or partially correct the condition that is causing them.
A real world example of an accidental mitigation by a wye;delta bank:
A distribution circuit extended three phases about 15 miles from the substation.
At that point there was a small radio transmitter fed from a wye:delta bank.
From there, two phases extended for an unknown number of miles picking up single phase loads.
A fiend who was an engineer in the distribution department of the utility asked me for an opinion on what happened next.
The circuit was reasonably well balanced on all of the substation meters.
The engineer noticed that the radio station was defunct and service had been discontinued for a couple of years.
He issued orders that the transformer bank be de-energized.
He told me that the metering in the sub station "went crazy".
What had been a reasonably balanced circuit was now a severely unbalanced circuit.
Accidental wye:delta mitigation.
Another case of accidental mitigation, this time by induction motors.
This was a fairly large saw mill on the end of about 50 miles of three phase line.
Two phases extended about 20 miles further.
There was a dairy with an open delta three phase supply at the end of that line.
Unbalance caused by open delta loading is further degraded by voltage drop on the neutral caused the neutral current.
The voltage unbalance at the mill was pretty bad.
When the first motor was started, the current was excessive in proportion to the load on the motor.
As more motors were started, the voltage balance got better and the excessive currents were reduced as the multiple motors shared the task of partially mitigating the voltage unbalance.
--------------------
Ohm's law
Not just a good idea;
It's the LAW!