Analysis of Asymmetrical Component Influence on Arc Current in the Determination of Arc Thermal Performance Value of Protective Personal Equipment | IEEE Journals & Magazine | IEEE Xplore

Analysis of Asymmetrical Component Influence on Arc Current in the Determination of Arc Thermal Performance Value of Protective Personal Equipment


Abstract:

An evaluation of relevance of current asymmetry on arc flash tests intended to determine arc rating parameters on fabrics and garments, as well as face shields, gloves, a...Show More

Abstract:

An evaluation of relevance of current asymmetry on arc flash tests intended to determine arc rating parameters on fabrics and garments, as well as face shields, gloves, and other materials were performed. Asymmetrical current is mentioned in American Standards (ASTM F 1959) to be maximum during tests and a reference on International Standard IEC 61482-1-1:2009, item 6.9, where an X/R ratio is required to obtain an asymmetry factor of 2.3, with a recommended source voltage of 2000 V. IEEE 1584 studies on the other hand states all calculation processes not clearly regarding asymmetry of fault current but assuming the linear effect of time and current on energy derived from steady-state current values. Technical basement for the asymmetry factor is never mentioned on arc flash test standards but it is supposed to be related to test strength conditions. As thermal conversion relationship with asymmetry is not clear in the literature, this study investigated, simulated, and performed practical measurements of electrical and thermal parameters related to arc flash tests, concluding that both symmetrical and asymmetrical arcing currents will confer the same arc rating results. Practical tests also showed that a source voltage of 2000 V is necessary only to produce arcing current asymmetry as lower voltages can be used to ignite and keep symmetrical arcing current for sufficient time on the arc rating tests, as previously regarded on literature which reduces significantly test setup and circuitry.
Published in: IEEE Transactions on Industry Applications ( Volume: 55, Issue: 2, March-April 2019)
Page(s): 2130 - 2137
Date of Publication: 12 October 2018

ISSN Information:


I. Introduction

The first arc flash laboratory in the southern hemisphere was established at the University of Sao Paulo in 2016. The intent is to use the laboratory to perform safety related research for the purpose of developing national regulations and standards. The laboratory was used for arc flash tests to determine arcing current behavior which culminated in a paper presented at the 2017 IEEE ESW in Brazil. This paper is based on that paper [1] and the supporting research.

Contact IEEE to Subscribe

References

References is not available for this document.