How To Reduce Exposure To Arc Flash Hazards: Industrial Solutions
How To Reduce Exposure To Arc Flash Hazards: Industrial Solutions
How To Reduce Exposure To Arc Flash Hazards: Industrial Solutions
Industrial Solutions
imagination at work
Multiple Issues
Todays power system engineer must not only assure that the facility receives all the power it
needs efficiently and reliably, it is also important to make sure it is done as safely as possible,
without loss of reliability, and under tight budgetary constraints.
Arc Blast
The tremendous temperatures of the arc cause the explosive
expansion of both the surrounding air and the metal in the
arc path. For example, copper expands by a factor of 67,000
Arc Flash times when it turns from a solid to a vapor. The danger
When an electric current passes through air between ungrounded associated with this expansion is one of high pressures,
conductors, or between ungrounded conductors and grounded sound, and shrapnel. The high pressures can easily exceed
conductors, the temperatures can reach 35,000F. Exposure to hundreds or even thousands of pounds per square foot,
these extreme temperatures both burns the skin directly and causes knocking workers off ladders, rupturing ear drums, and
ignition of clothing, which adds to the burn injury. The majority of collapsing lungs. The sounds associated with these pressures
hospital admissions due to electrical accidents are from arc-flash can exceed 160dB. Finally, material and molten metal is
burns, not from shocks. Each year more than 2,000 people are expelled away from the arc at speeds exceeding 700 mph
admitted to burn centers with severe arc-flash burns. Arc-flashes (1600 km/hr), fast enough for shrapnel to completely
can and do kill at distances of 10ft (3m). penetrate the human body.
Being near live electrical equipment is dangerous, whether shock or arc flash hazard.
GE solutions exist to help reduce hazard risk levels in a wide range of conditions and needs.
Definitions are reproduced with permision from NFPA70E Handbook for Electrical Safety in the
Workplace, Copyright 2009, National Fire Protection Association.
Multiple Solutions
Remote racking devices
EntelliGuard TU trip unit With our remote racking device, maintenance personnel
Industry-leading capabilities optimize selectivity and can rack low voltage breakers in and out from as far
mitigate arc flash hazards. away as 30 feet for greater arc flash protection. It
Waveform recognition instantaneous algorithm connects easily to WavePro, EntelliGuard and medium
provides optimized selectivity voltage PowerVac circuit breakers.
Instantaneous zone selective interlocking allows
fast and sensitive protection as well as simultaneous
selectivity up to 100kA for mains and ties
RELT (Reduced Energy Let-Through) settings with
positive status indication provide extra sensitive
and fast protection
Up to 44 different long time delay bands in two
distinct shapes
Up to 11 short time delays as fast at 1.5 cycles
Arc flash hazard analysis
to commit
Understand your potential risk by performing an arc
Multiple short time I2t curves set selectively without
flash hazard analysis in your facility. We can calculate
sacrificing protection
the NFPA-based level of Personal Protective Equipment
Four different ground fault curve shapes provide
(PPE) required in a given environment and communicate
optimal selectivity when implementing ground fault
PPE and approach distance to exposed energized
protection in systems with circuit breakers or fuses
equipment through a warning label system.
Metering, waveform capture, protective relays,
Modbus and Profibus communications
Plug-and-play upgradeability for a wide range of low
voltage power circuit breakers
How GE helps lead the way in
reducing arc flash hazards
Information provided is subject to change without notice. Please verify all details with GE. All values are design or
typical values when measured under laboratory conditions, and GE makes no warranty or guarantee, express or
implied, that such performance will be obtained under end-use conditions.
GE Energy
41 Woodford Avenue, Plainville, CT 06062
www.geindustrial.com
2010 General Electric Company
imagination at work
DEA-478A (10/10)