DocumentCode :
1882722
Title :
Practical methods in reducing the dangerous arc flash hazard areas in large industrial facilities
Author :
Hodder, Michael ; Vilcheck, William ; Croyle, Floyd ; McCue, David
Author_Institution :
Eaton Electr., Mississauga, ON
fYear :
2005
fDate :
23-23 June 2005
Firstpage :
191
Lastpage :
198
Abstract :
Industrial and commercial facilities have recognized that arc flash prevention is a part of a complete safety program. Quantification of the arc flash hazard level and labeling procedures are a major portion of this effort. When calculating incident energy, the engineer must deal with two main issues in addition to the burn hazard-blast pressure effect on the human body and worker comfort or mobility with multilayer flash suits and associated flame resistant protective equipment. For work tasks where calculated incident energy levels are above 40 cal/cm2, it is desirable to reduce the exposure to the worker to reduce the burn injury. This can be achieved with either a change to the work method or by engineering design. This paper will discuss various methods that have been used to reduce the incident energy levels from above 40 cal/cm2 to levels below 40 cal/cm 2. Specific solutions implemented at a large chemical manufacturing facility are presented. The solutions include equipment upgrades, overcurrent protection modifications, changes to work methods, and worker training which increase the effectiveness of an already robust safety program. In addition, design changes that could be considered to keep incident energy below 40 cal/cm2 for expansions or additions to the power system are discussed
Keywords :
IEEE standards; arcs (electric); chemical industry; design engineering; flameproofing; hazards; industrial power systems; overcurrent protection; power system protection; IEEE Std 1584trade-2002; NFPA 70E ONFPA; arc flash hazard; arc flash prevention; burn injury; chemical manufacturing facility; commercial facilities; engineering design; flame resistant protective equipment; flash hazard analysis; flash protection boundary; hazard-blast pressure effect; incident energy levels; large industrial facilities; multilayer flash; overcurrent coordination; overcurrent protection; personal protective equipment; power system; robust safety program; safety program; worker training; Energy states; Hazards; Humans; Industrial plants; Labeling; Nonhomogeneous media; Power engineering and energy; Power system protection; Pressure effects; Safety;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Pulp and Paper Industry Technical Conference, 2005. Conference Record of 2005 Annual
Conference_Location :
Jacksonville, FL
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-9089-X
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/PAPCON.2005.1502065
Filename :
1502065
Link To Document :
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