Hilton Hotel and Royale Palms Myrtle Beach, South Carolina July 11, 2011
Hilton Hotel and Royale Palms Myrtle Beach, South Carolina July 11, 2011
Hilton Hotel and Royale Palms Myrtle Beach, South Carolina July 11, 2011
NEC 2008
OSHA 29 CFR 1910
NFPA 70E - 2009
IEEE 1584
National Electrical Safety Code®
(NESC) - 2007
2007 NESC Article 410.A.3
“Effective as of January 1, 2009, employers are
to ensure that an assessment is performed to
determine potential exposure to an electric arc
for employees who work on or near energized
parts or equipment. If the assessment
determines a potential employee exposure
greater than 2 cal/cm2 exists, the employer
shall require employees to wear clothing or a
clothing system that has an effective arc rating
not less than the anticipated level of arc
energy.”
How do you comply with NESC 410.A.3?
Utilities must perform an assessment of their entire
electric system and verify that their PPE is providing
adequate protection.
The assessment utilizes voltage, clearing time and fault
current to determine the available incident energy.
You can determine this by using NESC tables 410-1 and
410-2 or by performing an arc flash hazard analysis.
○ When an arc hazard analysis is performed, it shall include a
calculation of the estimated arc energy based on the available
fault current, the duration of the arc(cycles), and the distance
from the arc to the employee
A comparison of these two options
NESC Tables 410-1 & 410-2
To utilize the tables, you must calculate single phase
to ground fault current and then identify upstream
protective device clearing times.
Not very accurate for “actual” fault current and
clearing time.
Perform an Arc flash hazard analysis, and
document the incident energy exposure.
IEEE 1584 (SKM, ETAP, Easypower, Duke Heat Flux,
and others)
ArcPro Software by Kinectrics
IEEE 1584
Guide for performing Arc Flash Hazard
calculations for incident energy and
determining proper PPE.
Calculations verified over voltage range from
208V to 15kV.
Three-phase arcs in enclosures or open air.
No single phase faults
Shifts from lab tested standard formula to Lee
Method for 25kV faults and above.
Lee method is based on theoretical behavior of arcs.
No data indicating Lee Method has been verified for
25kV and above.
ARCPRO
Physics based model which calculates the
thermal parameters of electric arcs.
Calculations are very similar to IEEE 1584 for
15kV systems.
Typically utilized for analysis of 25kV systems
and above.
Single-phase arcs in open air only. This is
typically more suited to the majority of
distribution system situations.
Multipliers (adjustment factors) are applied to
incident energy for three phase and faults in a
box (enclosures such as padmounted
transformers.
Arc Flash Analysis Steps
1. Data collection
1. Data Collection
Secure arc flash calculations and upstream
protective device settings from Wholesale
provider
Bring Electric system maps up to date and
create accurate substation one-lines if not
already available
Collect substation equipment nameplate
information and protective device settings
Collect distribution system information to
create typical feeder for overhead and
underground. This includes recloser and fuse
information.
Arc Flash Analysis Steps
1. Data collection
2. Determine system operating modes…choose
worst case
2. Determine System operating
modes
Identify modes of operation: ie utility
only, extended parallel generation only,
multiple scenarios with generators in
parallel with utility, etc.
Run the analyses on worst case.
Arc Flash Analysis Steps
1. Data collection
2. Determine system operating modes…choose worst case
3. Calculate available fault current throughout system
3. Calculate the available fault
current
Utilizing data collected in Step 1, create a
system single line and system parameters
in SKM software.
In SKM, calculate the available fault current
at each bus identified in the system one-
line.
For systems 25kV and above, first calculate
the single phase fault current in SKM,
identify clearing times and then input into
ARCPRO.
Arc Flash Analysis Steps
1. Data collection
2. Determine system operating modes…choose worst case
3. Calculate available fault current throughout system
4. Calculate arc flash incident energy levels
4. Calculate incident energy levels
In SKM, calculate the incident energy
levels at each bus in the system.
For systems 25kV and above, calculate
the single line to ground incident
energy in ARCPRO, then apply
adjustment factors to convert from
single phase faults to three phase
faults and faults in enclosures (such as
padmounts)
What is Incident Energy?
Unit of measure is cal/cm2 or Joules/cm2
A calorie is the energy required to raise one gram of water one degree
Celsius at one atmosphere.
One cal/cm2 is equivalent to the amount of energy produced by a
cigarette lighter in one second
The onset of second degree burns will occur at 1.2 cal/cm2 per second.
(See chart below)
Energy Category
(cal/cm2)
Untreated Cotton
0 - 1.2 0 Long Sleeve shirt & Long n/a
pants
4-8 2 Minimum 8
8-25 3 Minimum 25
FR Coveralls + CL.2
25-40 4 Minimum 40
Double Layer Switching
Coat + CL.2
4640A
Arc Flash Analysis Example #2
12.47kV system – Substation 240V AC
Panel
Arc Flash Calculation Summary
Time Current Curve (TCC)
Protected by upstream 3A Fuse
Arc Flash Calculation Summary
12.47kV system
240V AC Panel
240V AC Panel
Arc Flash Analysis Example #3
12.47kV system – 100A Fuse
Time Current Curve (TCC)
Arc Flash Calculation Summary
Protected by upstream 3000A breaker
Arc Flash Calculation Summary
12.47kV system
Michael C. Dougherty, PE
A.J. Molnar, PE
Southeastern Consulting Engineers, Inc.
Charlotte, NC