Air Circuit Breaker and Air Blast Circuit Breaker
Air Circuit Breaker and Air Blast Circuit Breaker
Air Circuit Breaker and Air Blast Circuit Breaker
This type of circuit breakers, is those kind of circuit breaker which operates in air at
atmospheric pressure. After development of oil circuit breaker, the medium voltage air circuit
breaker (ACB) is replaced completely by oil circuit breaker in different countries. But in countries
like France and Italy, ACBs are still preferable choice up to voltage 15 KV. It is also good choice to
avoid the risk of oil fire, in case of oil circuit breaker. In America ACBs were exclusively used for
the system up to 15 KV until the development of new vacuum and SF6 circuit breakers.
Types of ACB
The above method explains the working principle of plain break type air circuit breakers.
The air circuit breaker, operated within the voltage level 1 KV, does not require any arc
control device. Mainly for heavy fault current on low voltages (low voltage level above 1 KV)
ABCs with appropriate arc control device, are good choice. These breakers normally have two
pairs of contacts. The main pair of contacts carries the current at normal load and these contacts
are made of copper. The additional pair is the arcing contact and is made of carbon. When circuit
breaker is being opened, the main contacts open first and during opening of main contacts the
arcing contacts are still in touch with each other. As the current gets, a parallel low resistive path
through the arcing contact during opening of main contacts, there will not be any arcing in the
main contact. The arcing is only initiated when finally the arcing contacts are separated. The arc
contact is fitted with an arc runner which helps the arc discharge to move upward due to both
thermal and electromagnetic effects as shown in the figure below. As the arc is driven upward it
enters in the arc chute, consisting of splitters. The arc in chute will become colder, lengthen and
split hence arc voltage becomes much larger than system voltage and therefore the arc is
Quenched finally during the current zero.
Although this type of circuit breakers have become obsolete for medium voltage application, but
they are still preferable choice for high current rating in low voltage application.
As we said earlier that there are mainly two types of ACB, plain air circuit breaker and
air blast circuit breaker. But the later can be sub divided further into three different
categories.
1. Axial Blast ACB.
2. Axial Blast ACB with side moving contact.
3. Cross Blast ACB.
1.AXIAL BLAST AIR CIRCUIT BREAKER
In axial blast ACB the moving contact is in contact with fixed contact with the help of a spring
pressure as shown in the figure above. There is a nozzle orifice in the fixed contact which is
blocked by tip of the moving contact at normal closed condition of the breaker. When fault
occurs, the high pressure air is introduced into the arcing chamber. The air pressure will counter
the spring pressure and deforms the spring hence the moving contact is withdrawn from the fixed
contact and nozzle hole becomes open. At the same time the high pressure air starts flowing
along the arc through the fixed contact nozzle orifice. This axial flow of air along the arc through
the nozzle orifice will make the arc lengthen and colder hence arc voltage become much higher
than system voltage that means system voltage is insufficient to sustain the arc consequently the
arc is quenched.
In this type of axial blast air circuit breaker, the moving contact is fitted over a piston
supported over a spring. In order to open the circuit breaker the air is admitted into the arcing
chamber when pressure reaches to a predetermined value, it presses down the moving contact.
An arc is drawn between the fixed and moving contacts. The air blast immediately transfers the
arc to the arcing electrode and is consequently quenched by the axial flow of air.
The working principle of cross blast air circuit breaker is quite simple. In this system, a
pipe is fixed in perpendicular to the movement of moving contact in the arcing chamber and on
the opposite side of the arcing chamber one exhaust chamber is also fitted at the same alignment
of blast pipe, so that the air comes from blast pipe can straightly enter into exhaust chamber
through the contact gap of the breaker. The exhaust chamber is split with arc splitters. When
moving contact is withdrawn from fixed contact, an arc is established in between the contact, and
at the same time high pressure air coming from blast pipe will pass through the contact gap
radially, and the high pressure air blast will forcefully take the arc into exhaust chamber where
the arc is split with the help of arc splitters and ultimately arc is quenched.