sonic02
Electrical
- Feb 13, 2011
- 22
Hi there,
Some of the traditional methods for reducing arc-flash is to have to bus differential protection for quicker tripping and at times reducing incident energy on the bus.
Now, as far as I know, most of the electrical softwares (EasyPower, ETAP and SKM) allows you to model only overcurrent protection for a modern protective relay in a system ( Please correct me if i'm wrong here) and not differential.
Now, suppose you have a high incident energy (CAT #4) on a system bus that you modelled in an electrical software but due to the software capabilities, you are only able to reduce the clearing times for 50/51, amongst others, to reduce the incident energy on that particular bus. But you know that bus differential protection is being used but you are unable to apply it to the software to get a reduced incident energy. What is the best way to circumvent that? Do you typically not include differential protection for arc-flash calculations as that would give you the best case, and that is not something you want in an arc-flash hazard analysis ?
Thanks.
Sonic
Some of the traditional methods for reducing arc-flash is to have to bus differential protection for quicker tripping and at times reducing incident energy on the bus.
Now, as far as I know, most of the electrical softwares (EasyPower, ETAP and SKM) allows you to model only overcurrent protection for a modern protective relay in a system ( Please correct me if i'm wrong here) and not differential.
Now, suppose you have a high incident energy (CAT #4) on a system bus that you modelled in an electrical software but due to the software capabilities, you are only able to reduce the clearing times for 50/51, amongst others, to reduce the incident energy on that particular bus. But you know that bus differential protection is being used but you are unable to apply it to the software to get a reduced incident energy. What is the best way to circumvent that? Do you typically not include differential protection for arc-flash calculations as that would give you the best case, and that is not something you want in an arc-flash hazard analysis ?
Thanks.
Sonic