Discuss Adiabatic in the Electrical Wiring, Theories and Regulations area at ElectriciansForums.net

Judd

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Does anyone know if the adiabatic equation applies to aluminium conductors when calculating the csa of earthing conductors, or guide me to where I might be able to find an answer.
Cheers
 
what do you call a supply circuit? if it's a distribution circuit, 5 secs. max. applies, but the time/current graphs will give you the actual diss. time .
 
what do you call a supply circuit? if it's a distribution circuit, 5 secs. max. applies, but the time/current graphs will give you the actual diss. time .
Sorry it's a building with a block of flats the flats are fed from meters located in a communal hall with each flat fed from the bemco, I've never really understood why a shorter disconnection time requires a smaller earthing conductor, as It stands with a 5 second disconnection time min earth would be 18mm but with 0.4 disconnection time it drops to 5mm
 
yeah, but those figures are the max. allowable diss. time, not the actual time which you get from the time/current graphs.
 
Sorry it's a building with a block of flats the flats are fed from meters located in a communal hall with each flat fed from the bemco, I've never really understood why a shorter disconnection time requires a smaller earthing conductor, as It stands with a 5 second disconnection time min earth would be 18mm but with 0.4 disconnection time it drops to 5mm
Because the fault clears quicker and the conductor will not get to a high enough temperature to melt, if it was 5 seconds there's plenty of cooking time.
 
Table 52.3 has the minimum for aluminium wire as 16mm

Generally you don't want to use aluminium unless it is really necessary, say for cost reasons on big SWA style cables, as you have far more difficulties with terminating it and preventing galvanic corrosion.

The adiabatic limit is one you should be careful with, as the simple "rule of thumb" is half the phase conductor for conductors above 35mm, 16mm CPC down to 16mm phase conductors, and same CPC as phase below that (Table 54.7 but also scaled by adiabatic k-factors if CPC and phase are different materials).

So if your results are well below that you need to be very sure that the end-of-circuit Zs and OCPD really meet the disconnection times and fault currents you based the computation on. Then you get on to the regulations citing tables such as 54.1 for buried earth conductors, and 54.8 if it is TN-C-S supply, etc, that present further limits on how small your CPC/earth can be irrespective of the adiabatic result.
 

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