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Electrical safety issues Cezary Worek, Łukasz Krzak EMC 2013 Agenda 1. What are electric shocks and how to avoid them. 2. Electric shock severity factors. 3. Safe current and voltage levels. 4. First aid in case of an electric shock. 5. Classification of electrical systems due to voltage levels. 6. Appliance classes. 7. Earthing arrangements in power grids. 8. DC power networks. 2 Electric shocks and how to avoid them 3 What are the main reasons for electric shocks to occur. Main reasons people get electric shocks: • lack of proper caution • headlessness • disregard to rules and regulations • not knowing the rules and regulations • lack of education (that’s why we’re here) • mistakes • lack of supervision • malfunctions due to lack of proper conservation 4 Common causes of electric shocks. An electrical shock may happed due to following events. • Approx. 60% of all electric shocks come from operating voltages which means that a person touches parts of an electrical circuit which are normally under voltage or is close enough to get shocked. • Approx. 40% of all electric shocks come from the fact that people touch conductive parts which are not normally under voltage, but due to isolation malfunction these parts become energized. • Approx. 1% of all electric shocks come from stray voltages, that is due to potential difference on the ground surface caused by a current injected to it. Statistics show that approx. 80% of electric shocks are caused by low voltage with 5% death rate, and the other 20% by high voltage with 20% death rate. 5 What is an electric shock? What are it’s effects? An electric shock is actually caused by the current flow through skin, muscles or hair which causes changes and disturbances in how our body normally functions. These changes and disturbances are mainly: • disturbances in heart beat (in ex. ventricular fibrillation), • disturbances in breathing, • heat effects due to current flow, • shock and the reaction to shock. An electric shocks may have also indirect effects due to current flow, such as: • electric arc burns, • eye damage due to excessive light, • ear damage due to excessive noise, • mechanical damages due to in ex. falling. 6 What are the electric shock severity factors? In the last 30 years there has been a lot of progress in research on the effects of electric shock to human body. The conducted tests on animals and humans were carefully analyzed by the International Electrotechnical Commision (IEC). There are three main groups of factors that influence how severe is a shock to the human body: • electrical factors • physiological factors • external factors 7 Electrical factors. Electrical factors include: • Type of current: DC or AC – in case of AC currents what matters is also the frequency. • Current magnitude. • Time of exposure to current flow. • The path of current flowing through the body. • Individual body factors (in example skin conductivity). The most important aspects are current magnitude and exposure time. The current magnitudes are roughly divided into 3 ranges: Current magnitude 1 mA Physiological effect Threshold of feeling, tingling sensation 10-20 mA "Can't let go!" current - onset of sustained muscular contraction. 30-400 mA Ventricular fibrillation, fatal if continued. The IEC 60479-1 publication updated in 2005 defines four zones of currentmagnitude / time-duration, in each of which the pathophysiological effects are described. 8 Electrical factors. 9 10 What are the other factors? Physiological factors: • How is the body developed (body mass and geometry) • Emotional and psychological state • Disease conditions such as coronary heart disease, asthma, tuberculosis, diabetes, alcoholism etc. Externals factors: • Factors that cause human resistance to drop (humidity, temperature) • Factors that make it easier for current to flow to the ground (bare ground places, conductive floor) 11 First aid in case of an electric shock 12 Important qualities during first aid. You should: ACT FAST BE DETERMINED BE CALM It is especially important to act fast since the chances of saving the other people’s life who is unconscious and not breathing are dropping rapidly every minute. If the cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is undertaken after 1 minute after loosing breath the chances of saving life are about 95%. After 5 minutes the chances drop to 25% and after 8 minutes it’s only 5%. 13 First aid in case of an electric shock. FIRST MAKE SURE YOU ARE SAFE ! DO NOT touch the casualty with your unprotected hands. You don’t want to be the casualty too. 1. 2. 3. 4. Break the contact by switching off the current, removing the plug or wrenching the cable free; or if this is not possible stand on a dry insulating material, such as a wooden pallet or plastic mat, then use a dry wooden or plastic implement to free the casualty from contact with the electrical source; or wear rubber or plastic insulating gloves to pull the casualty free; or if dry rope is available, without touching the casualty, loop it around the feet or under the arms and pull the casualty free. Before you continue make sure you and the casualty are safe. 14 First aid in case of an electric shock. CHECK IF THE CASUALTY IS RESPONSIVE Unresponsive ? Shout for help Open airway 15 First aid in case of an electric shock. CHECK IF THE CASUALTY IS BREATHING Not breathing normally ? Order someone to call 999 or do it yourself Breathing OK ? Place in the recovery position Begin CPR Get help Check for continuous breathing 16 CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation) 30 chest compressions 2 rescue breaths PROCEED UNTIL THE AMBULANCE ARRIVES! 17 First aid in case of an electric shock. 18 Safety issues in the electrical grid 19 IEC voltage ranges The International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) recognizes these 3 voltage ranges. IEC voltage range AC DC Defining risk High voltage > 1000Vrms > 1500V Electrical arcing Low voltage 50-1000Vrms 120-1500V Electrical shock Extra low voltage < 50Vrms < 120 V Low risk 20 Extra low voltage range The International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) recognizes these 3 voltage ranges. IEC voltage range AC DC Defining risk High voltage > 1000Vrms > 1500V Electrical arcing Low voltage 50-1000Vrms 120-1500V Electrical shock Extra low voltage < 50Vrms < 120 V Low risk 21 Voltage safety levels One of the key elements to lower the risk of an electric shock is to lower the operating voltage . Generally, under normal conditions the human body has a resistance of about 1kOhm. The dangerous current magnitude is somewhere near 50mA for AC and 120mA for DC. This in turn gives that a voltage that is safe to touch is 50VAC or 120VDC. However these levels are applicable in normal conditions (dry air). When humidity increases these safety levels are divided by two. In extremely wet conditions (such as swimming pools or sauna) these levels are further divided. Conditions Safe voltage levels Normal, dry conditions 50VAC 120VDC Special conditions 25VAC 60VDC Extreme conditions 12VAC 30VDC These voltage levels are considered to have low risk of electrical shock and are part of a so called extra low voltage range defined by IEC. 22 Special conditions The common rule is that the normative voltage levels apply to normal conditions. In cases when environmental or other factors increase the risk of electric shock additional precautions are introduced. These precautions include: • safety zones with limited electrical equipment • additional functional bonding conductor • lower voltage levels up to 25 or 12 VAC and 60 or 30VDC • residual-current devices with threshold level not higher than 30mA • supervision of the isolation state in IT power grids 23 Basic protection The basic protection is designed to prevent electric shock from operating voltages. The purpose is actually to prevent touching of energized elements. According to IEC 60364-41 the means of achieving this goal are: • isolation of operating elements • providing barriers (compartments)and shields (enclosures) min IP2X* • providing fences • putting equipment out of the reach • using sensitive residual-current devices with threshold level not higher than 30mA as complementary protection * - The IP Code, Ingress Protection Rating classifies and rates the degree of protection provided against the intrusion of solid objects (including body parts like hands and fingers), dust, accidental contact, and water in mechanical casings and with electrical enclosures. P2X is frequently used on electrical items to specify the item must prevent finger access to live terminals in ex. plug sockets are IP2X 24 Additional protection The additional protection is designed to minimize effects of electric shock. The actual purpose is not to let human body to interact with elements under voltage higher than considered safe (in ex. 50VAC under normal conditions) for a longer time. This can be achieved by: • using automatic shutdown of power supplies in TN, TT and IT power grids • using safety class II devices or devices with equivalent degree of protection • electrical separation • isolation of work station • ungrounded equipotential bonding The following devices are considered to deliver safe voltage: • isolation transformers and isolated power converters • batteries and engine generators • electronic devices 25 Appliance classes. In the electrical appliance manufacturing industry, the following IEC protection classes are used to differentiate between the protective-earth connection requirements of devices: 0, I, II and III. Class 0. These appliances have no protective-earth connection and feature only a single level of insulation and were intended for use in dry areas. A single fault could cause an electric shock or other dangerous occurrence. Class I. These appliances must have their chassis connected to electrical earth by an earth conductor (in Europe marked with green and yellow colors). A fault in the appliance which causes a live conductor to contact the casing will cause a current to flow in the earth conductor. This current should trip either an overcurrent device (fuse or circuit breaker) or a residual-current device (RCD) which will cut off the supply of electricity to the appliance. 26 Appliance classes. Class II. Also called double insulated electrical appliance is one which has been designed in such a way that it does not require a safety connection to electrical earth (ground). The basic requirement is that no single failure can result in dangerous voltage becoming exposed so that it might cause an electric shock and that this is achieved without relying on an earthed metal casing. This is usually achieved at least in part by having two layers of insulating material surrounding live parts or by using reinforced insulation. In Europe, a double insulated appliance must be labeled Class II, double insulated, or bear the double insulation symbol (a square inside another square). Class III. An appliance that is designed to be supplied from a separated/safety extra-low voltage (SELV) power source. The voltage from a SELV supply is low enough that under normal conditions a person can safely come into contact with it without risk of electrical shock. The extra safety features built into Class I and Class II appliances are therefore not required. For medical devices, compliance with Class III is not considered sufficient protection, and further more-stringent regulations apply to such equipment. 27 Extra low voltage (ELV) circuits The International Electrotechnical Commission and its member organizations define an ELV circuit as one in which the electrical potential of any conductor against earth (ground) is not more than either 25 volts RMS (35 volts peak) for alternating current, or ripple-free 60 volts for direct current under dry conditions. Lower numbers apply in wet conditions, or when large contact areas are exposed to contact with the human body. The IEC defines three types of extra-low-voltage systems: • FELV, • PELV, • SELV which are distinguished by their successively more restrictive safety properties. NOTE: Lower values noted here come from some confusion in IEC standards. 28 Separated extra low voltage (SELV) circuits IEC defines a SELV system as "an electrical system in which the voltage cannot exceed ELV under normal conditions, and under single-fault conditions, including earth faults in other circuits". A SELV circuit must have: • protective-separation (i.e., double insulation, reinforced insulation or protective screening) from all circuits other than SELV and PELV (i.e., all circuits that might carry higher voltages) • simple separation from other SELV systems, from PELV systems and from earth (ground). The safety of a SELV circuit is provided by • the extra-low voltage • the low risk of accidental contact with a higher voltage; • the lack of a return path through earth (ground) that electric current could take in case of contact with a human body. The design of a SELV circuit typically involves an isolating transformer, guaranteed minimum distances between conductors and electrical insulation barriers. The electrical connectors of SELV circuits should be designed such that they do not mate with connectors commonly used for non-SELV circuits. 29 SELV circuit SELV (Separated Extra-Low Voltage) circuit is a low voltage circuit without grounding, which is powered by a voltage that is safe in a long term. This allows robust separation from other circuits. Such connections deliveres both basic and additional protection. Isolation transformer class III device 30 Protected extra low voltage (PELV) circuits IEC 61140 defines a PELV system as "an electrical system in which the voltage cannot exceed ELV under normal conditions, and under single-fault conditions, except earth faults in other circuits". A PELV circuit only requires protective-separation from all circuits other than SELV and PELV (i.e., all circuits that might carry higher voltages), but it may have connections to other PELV systems and earth (ground). In contrast to a SELV circuit, a PELV circuit can have a protective earth (ground) connection. A PELV circuit, just as with SELV, requires a design that guarantees a low risk of accidental contact with a higher voltage. For a transformer, this can mean that the primary and secondary windings must be separated by an extra insulation barrier, or by a conductive shield with a protective earth connection. 31 PELV circuit PELV (Protected Extra-Low Voltage) circuit is a low voltage circuit with grounding, which is powered by a voltage that is safe in a long term and is well separated from other circuits. The main difference between SELV is that in PELV one line has to be grounded. In addition all conductive elements of powered devices that can be touched should also be grounded. Such connections also deliveres both basic and additional protection. Isolation transformer class III device 32 Functional extra low voltage (FELV) circuits The term functional extra-low voltage (FELV) describes any other extra-low-voltage circuit that does not fulfill the requirements for an SELV or PELV circuit. Although the FELV part of a circuit uses an extra-low voltage, it is not adequately protected from accidental contact with higher voltages in other parts of the circuit. Therefore the protection requirements for the higher voltage have to be applied to the entire circuit. Examples for FELV circuits include those that generate an extra low voltage through a semiconductor device or a potentiometer. 33 FELV circuit FELV (Functional Extra-Low Voltage) circuit is a low voltage circuit that does not guarantee well separation from other circuits and an extra low voltage is used because of functional reasons and not safety precautions like in SELV. This circuit can be powered from any device galvanically separated from the power grid. class I device Transformer 34 Low voltage range The International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) recognizes these 3 voltage ranges. IEC voltage range AC DC Defining risk High voltage > 1000Vrms > 1500V Electrical arcing Low voltage 50-1000Vrms 120-1500V Electrical shock Extra low voltage < 50Vrms < 120 V Low risk The low voltage range denotes voltages above extra-low voltage range and up to 1000V rms for AC with frequency up to 60Hz and up to 1500V for DC. Full information about power grids are published in IEC 60364-3:2008 — Electrical installations of buildings. Part 3: Assessment of general characteristics. 35 Three phase electric power. How to transfer electrical energy across long distances in a safe and economical way? Let’s try a simple 2-wire (single phase) network: In this example the maximum operating voltage is 120VAC. However we need a copper wire that can carry 250A of current. In this example such wire must have about 12mm diameter and will weight 760kg per km per wire giving more than 1.5 tons of copper per km of installation. 36 Three phase electric power. What happens if we add another wire ? The operating voltage increases to 240VAC. The currents drop to 125A which gives us copper wire with 6,5mm diameter which in turn wights about 300kg per km per wire giving about 900kg for one km of installation. 37 Three phase electric power. In a 3-phase network the maximum operating voltage drops to 208VAC. The current drops to about 84A. We need a copper wire with diameter < 5mm which gives 186kg per km per wire, wich in turn leads to 744kg of copper per one km of installation. 38 Skin effect. Skin effect is the tendency of an alternating electric current (AC) to become distributed within a conductor such that the current density is largest near the surface of the conductor, and decreases with greater depths in the conductor. The electric current flows mainly at the "skin" of the conductor, between the outer surface and a level called the skin depth. 39 Three phase electric power. Advantages of a 3-phase power systems: • Good compromise between voltage and current magnitudes. • The phase currents tend to cancel out one another, summing to zero in the case of a linear balanced load. This makes it possible to reduce the size of the neutral conductor; all the phase conductors carry the same current and so can be the same size, for a balanced load. • Power transfer into a linear balanced load is constant, which helps to reduce generator and motor vibrations • Three-phase systems can produce a magnetic field that rotates in a specified direction, which simplifies the design of electric motors. 40 Three phase electric power. 230/400V (Europe) 41 Three phase electric power – load configurations. There are two basic three phase configurations: delta (triangle) and wye(star). Either type can be wired for three or four wires. The fourth wire is called a neutral. The '3wire' and '4-wire' designations do not count the ground wire used on many transmission lines which is solely for fault protection and does not deliver power. High-leg delta connection 42 Earthing arrangements. There are several types of earthing arrangements. International standard IEC 60364 distinguishes three families of earthing arrangements, using the two-letter codes: TN, TT, and IT. The first letter indicates the connection between earth and the power-supply equipment (generator or transformer): T - direct connection of a point with earth (Latin: terra); I - no point is connected with earth (isolation), except perhaps via a high impedance. The second letter indicates the connection between earth and the electrical device being supplied: T - direct connection of a point with earth N - direct connection to neutral at the origin of installation, which is connected to the earth Optional following letters denote whether the PE and N are separated: C – PE and N are combined in a single wire S – PE and N are separated 43 Common symbols in power networks. color codes used in European Union (EU) defined in IEC 60446 These are common symbols used in electrical power network schematics. L1, L2, L3 – phase wires N – neutral wire, is a circuit conductor that carries current in normal operation and is connected to the neutral point of the electrical network. PE – protective earth, (known as an equipment grounding conductor in the US) is a low impedance connection to an earth electrode or an equipotential bonding wire. To avoid possible voltage drop no current is allowed to flow in this conductor under normal circumstances, but fault currents will usually trip or blow the fuse or circuit breaker protecting the circuit. PEN – protective earth and neutral, is a conductor that acts both as protective earth and neutral. 44 Common symbols in power networks. color codes used across different countries L2 L1 L3 Neutral Ground/ protective earth Green/yellow striped (green on very old installations) White (or black)1(prev. Dark blue (or grey)1 yellow) Black (or Red Black Blue White or Grey Green or bare copper Canada (isolated installations) Orange Brown Yellow White Green European Union Black Brown Grey Blue Green/yellow striped Older European Black or brown Black or brown Black or brown Blue Green/yellow striped UK Red Yellow Blue Black Green/yellow striped Republic of India and Pakistan Red Yellow Blue Black Green Russia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, China Yellow Green Red Light blue Green/yellow striped Norway Black White/Grey Brown Blue Yellow/green striped Australia and New Zealand Canada Red (or brown)1 blue)1 United States Black Red Blue White, or grey Green, green/yellow striped,7 or a bare copper wire United States (alternative practice)5 Brown Orange (delta), violet (wye) Yellow Grey, or white Green 45 TN networks. picture presents a TN-S network • Neutral point of the voltage source should be grounded. • All touchable conductive elements that in normal operation are not under voltage should be grounded through PE or PEN wire. • PE and PEN wires should be connected to the grounding electrode • It is advised to ground the point at which the the PE is inserted into the building. • It is advised that the point at which the PEN wire is separated to PE and N was grounded through artificial or natural grounding electrode. • Every building should have main equipotential bonding. • Additional bondings of touchable parts should present in places with greater risk of electrick shock. 46 TN-S networks. TN-S earthing arrangement allows to use the most effective protection among all TN networks. In a TN-S network, N and PE are separated along the whole installation and are connected to the main grounding electrode. This means that during normal operation the current flows only through phase and neutral wires. The advantage is that PE can be connected with many equipotential bondings along its way. In each place it is also possible to use residual-current devices (RCD) 47 Short circuit in a TN-S network. What happens if somebody touches the phase wire. The dashed line shows the short circuit current loop when (due to malfunction) one of the phase wires is connected to PE (in ex. enclosure). 48 Additional protection in a TN-S network. What happens if somebody touches the phase wire? The current will flow through the human body closing via earth. This current may have significant and dangerous magnitude, but usually will not trip the overcurrent protection which must be rated at even higher current for functional reasons. 49 Residual-current devices. One of the most effective protection devices used in electrical networks are residual current devices (RCDs). Depending on the type of a RCD it can serve several purposes: • protection from electrical shock caused by indirect touching of energized elements • protection from electrical shock caused by direct touching of energized elements, when nominal trip current is below 30mA • as a mean of automatic power shutdown • protection from fire caused by currents flowing to the ground when nominal trip current is below 500mA 50 RCD. Principle of operation. RCDs operate by measuring the current balance between two conductors using a differential current transformer. This measures the difference between the current flowing through the live conductor and that returning through the neutral conductor. If these do not sum to zero, there is a leakage of current to somewhere else (to earth/ground, or to another circuit), and the device will open its contacts. Residual current detection is complementary to overcurrent detection. Residual current detection cannot provide protection for overload or short-circuit currents, except for the special case of a short circuit from live to ground (not live to neutral). 51 RCD. Principle of operation. Human resistance Site resistance through ground When a human body touches a wire, some I current will flow potentially causing an electric shock. This current should trip over the RCD causing it to shut off the voltage from the protected circuit in a very short time (typically < 0.2s) 52 RCD. Principle of operation. Here’s how it may actually look like in a single phase RCD. 53 RCD. Principle of operation. Here’s how it may actually look like in a three phase RCD. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Transformer core Sensing winding Trip winding Connector Magnet/Electromagnet Spring Switch lock On/Off switch Test switch Current limiting resistor (for testing) 54 RCD. Basic parameters. • In – nominal current that is allowed to flow through the RCD in a normal operation (current rating) • IΔn – nominal trip current that is the value of the current imbalance that will cause the RCD to activate • t – switch off time Additional parameters may include: temperature range, max. short-circuit power that can be dissipated, frequency characteristics. Due to the value of trip current 3 types of RCDs may by distinguished: • IΔn ≤ 30 mA – these devices are designed to protect people from getting a dangerous electrical shock • IΔn ≤ 500 mA – these devices mainly protect sites from flames causing by currents flowing through grounded elements (these should trip over in 0,2s or less) • Some RCDs are designed for IΔn of up to 10A, but these protect mainly the equipment – usually in high power applications. 55 TN-C networks. In a TN-C earthing arrangement the PE and N are combined in a single wire. This is a major drawback. In a single phase circuit this wire carries full operating current. In 3phase circuits this wire may also conduct current due to phase asymmetry. 56 Protection in TN-C networks. The schematic above shows the principle of automatic power shutdown (so called zeroing) in case of malfunction in a TN-C network. A TN-C network should be protected by overcurrent protective devices (fuses, circuit breakers). 57 TN-C networks. The big disadvantage of TN-C is when due to malfunction PEN wire is broken, in class I devices dangerous voltage becomes present at the device enclosure. In single phase devices this voltage may be close to the nominal network voltage. In 3-phase devices this voltage may be close to the nominal network phase-to-phase voltage, depending on the load of particular phases at the time of malfunction. The risk of electric shock or device damage is even higher, because the overcurrent protection devices will not be activated until their trip current is reached. 58 TN-C networks. Another disadvantage of TN-C arrangement is that due to asymmetry of loads some voltage will be generated between PEN and ground in a place of device connection. The actual value will vary depending on the level of asymmetry. In example in light sources powered by a TN-C network part of the load current flows through the PEN wire and another part flows through the conductive truss (construction). When PEN is broken due to malfunction the light source will still work and the whole current will flow through the construction. 59 TN-C networks. It is also worth to note that in TN-C arrangements we cannot use residual-current protective devices. The PEN wire and all elements attached to it do not guarantee good isolation from earth. It seams that the only advantage of the TN-C arrangement is cost of installation (no additional wire). The only question is whether we should look for savings in the area of our safety. 60 TN-C-S networks. TN-C-S are now most often used in new or modernized buildings. This arrangement can be regarded as a TN-C network that powers a TN-S network. It is considered to be more safe than TN-C arrangement but carries some of it’s flaws. In a point of PEN separation it is advised to have additional grounding that is compliant to regulations. However this grounding does not provide sufficient protection in case when PEN wire is broken. This arrangement allows to use residual-current devices as additional protective measures. 61 Protection in TN-C-S networks. The schematic above shows how fuses and RCDs are used in TN-C-S network for protection. The PE wire must be a solid connection. No circuit breakers, fuses, switches or connectors are allowed. 62 How fast the overcurrent protection should activate? According to regulations in order to determine the shutdown current we have to use the characteristics provided by the supplier of the protection device, that show both current and time. Nominal grid voltage Normal conditions UL < 50VAC and 120VDC Special conditions UL < 25VAC and 60VDC 120V 0,8 s 0,35 s 230V 0,4 s 0,2 s 277V 0,4 s 0,2 s 400V 0,2 s 0,05 s 480V 0,1 s 0,05 s 580V 0,1 s 0,02 s At substation level the activation time may reach even 5s. 63 TT networks. In TT arrangements the neutral point is grounded in the transformer. Each device has it’s own grounding, usually provided in the exact place of installation. All touchable conductive elements of these devices are locally grounded, separately for each device. These arrangements are often used for high power devices or high in-rush currents, when requirements for a regular PE wire are not economically effective. The TT arrangements must be supervised. The state of grounding must be checked periodically. 64 TT networks. In arrangements with grounded middle star point the current that flows when due to malfunction one of the phase wires is shorted to the grounded enclosure should force the protective devices to: • either shut down the power, or • cause the voltage to drop to a safe level (in ex. 50VAC) Safe level 65 Protection in TT networks. As a protection measure in TT networks, the following devices can be used: • overcurrent protection devices (fuses, circuit breakers) • residual current devices • earth leakage circuit breakers 66 IT networks. In IT arrangements the neutral point of the transformer is isolated. The PE points of each load are connected directly and separately to the ground usually in the exact place of installation. All touchable conductive elements of these devices are locally grounded, separately for each device. 67 IT networks. Spark gap In addition, in IT arrangements the neutral point of the transformer should be protected by a spark gap or high impedance, which main purpose is no to let the voltage between N and PE to go too high. 68 IT networks. In case of an insulation break in a protected device some current will flow due to line capacitance to ground. This current usually will not trip the overcurrent protection, but will cause the operating voltage to drop below 50VAC. Safe level However there is still the possibility of double isolation failure which may lead to a current loop through ground. This is why in IT arrangements it is obligatory to control the state of insulation. 69 IT networks. Single insulation failure example. Before the malfunction. The capacitive currents depend on the actual capacity between the lines and ground. This in turn depends on the length of the wires. Insulation break. The short circuit current to ground does not reach high magnitude. The voltages between „healthy” phases and ground increses 3 times. The Iz current may be too low to trip the overcurrent protection. This is why additional protection is needed: • grounding of all exposed conductive parts • controling the earthing resistance to make sure that the voltage between PE and ground is not exceeding safety levels 70 IT networks. Double insulation failure example. The overcurrent protection will trip when there is a double insulation failure. 71 TODO: DC power networks 72 73