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Circuit integrity

 
Circuit Integrity

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Circuit integrity



 
 
Circuit integrity refers to the operability of electrical circuits during a fire
Fire

Fire is the oxidation of a combustion material releasing heat, light, and various Chemical reaction products such as carbon dioxide and water....
. It is a form of fire-resistance rating
Fire-resistance rating

A fire-resistance rating typically means the duration for which a passive fire protection system can withstand a standard fire test. This can be quantified simply as a measure of time, or it may entail a host of other criteria, involving other evidence of functionality or fitness for purpose....
. Circuit integrity is achieved via passive fire protection
Passive fire protection

Passive fire protection is an integral component of the three components of structural fire protection and fire safety in a building. PFP attempts to contain fires or slow the spread, through use of fire resistant walls, floors, and doors ....
 means, which are subject to stringent listing and approval use and compliance.

Fireproofing
Providing fireproofing
Fireproofing

Fireproofing, a passive fire protection measure, refers to the act of making materials or building more resistant to fire, or to those materials themselves, or the act of applying such materials....
 for cables, cable tray
Cable tray

A cable tray system, according to the US National Electrical Code, is "a unit or assembly of units or sections and associated fittings forming a rigid structural system used to securely fasten or support cables and raceways." Cable trays are used to hold up and distribute cables....
s, or electrical conduit, is meant to keep cables operational during a specified fire exposure and time.






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Micccable
Micables
Circuit integrity refers to the operability of electrical circuits during a fire
Fire

Fire is the oxidation of a combustion material releasing heat, light, and various Chemical reaction products such as carbon dioxide and water....
. It is a form of fire-resistance rating
Fire-resistance rating

A fire-resistance rating typically means the duration for which a passive fire protection system can withstand a standard fire test. This can be quantified simply as a measure of time, or it may entail a host of other criteria, involving other evidence of functionality or fitness for purpose....
. Circuit integrity is achieved via passive fire protection
Passive fire protection

Passive fire protection is an integral component of the three components of structural fire protection and fire safety in a building. PFP attempts to contain fires or slow the spread, through use of fire resistant walls, floors, and doors ....
 means, which are subject to stringent listing and approval use and compliance.

Fireproofing


Providing fireproofing
Fireproofing

Fireproofing, a passive fire protection measure, refers to the act of making materials or building more resistant to fire, or to those materials themselves, or the act of applying such materials....
 for cables, cable tray
Cable tray

A cable tray system, according to the US National Electrical Code, is "a unit or assembly of units or sections and associated fittings forming a rigid structural system used to securely fasten or support cables and raceways." Cable trays are used to hold up and distribute cables....
s, or electrical conduit, is meant to keep cables operational during a specified fire exposure and time. This can be done in two different ways:
  • Cable coating is generally considered a fire retardant
    Fire retardant

    A fire retardant is a substance that helps delay or prevent combustion. Fire retardants are commonly used in fire fighting. Water is the most commonly used fire retardant, but the phrase typically refers to chemical retardants, including fire-fighting foams and fire-retardant gels....
    , which lowers the spread of flame and generation of smoke
    Smoke

    File:Bling-Bling Skywriting David Shankbone.jpgSmoke is the collection of airborne solid and liquid particulates and gases emitted when a material undergoes combustion or pyrolysis, together with the quantity of air that is entrainment or otherwise mixed into the mass....
     along the combustible cable jacketing. Some cable coating systems are able to achieve a measure of circuit integrity, which is demonstrated and quantified through certification listing
    Certification listing

    A Certification listing is a document against which a field installation is compared to make sure that it complies with a regulation, such as a building code....
     and listing and approval use and compliance.
  • An enclosure can be provided. Calcium silicate
    Calcium silicate

    Calcium silicate is the chemical compound Ca2SiO4, also known as calcium orthosilicate and sometimes formulated 2CaO.SiO2....
     board can be used, or other methods including boards made of vermiculite
    Vermiculite

    Vermiculite is a natural mineral that expands with the application of heat. The expansion process is called exfoliation and it is routinely accomplished in purpose-designed commercial furnaces....
    , bonded and pressed with sodium silicate
    Sodium silicate

    Sodium silicate is the common name for a compound sodium metasilicate, Na2SiO3, also known as water glass or liquid glass....
    , flexible wraps made of ceramic fibre and rockwool, or ceramic fibre wraps treated with endothermic
    Endothermic

    In thermodynamics, the word endothermic "within-heating" describes a process or reaction that absorbs energy in the form of heat. Its etymology stems from the Greek prefix endo-, meaning ?inside? and the Greek suffix ?thermic, meaning ?to heat?....
     materials. In all cases, the installed configuration must meet the certification listing
    Certification listing

    A Certification listing is a document against which a field installation is compared to make sure that it complies with a regulation, such as a building code....
     of the tested system. Alternatively, cables that achieve fire-resistance ratings on their own can be used, such as Mineral-insulated copper-clad cable
    Mineral-insulated copper-clad cable

    Mineral-insulated copper-clad cable is a variety of electrical cable made from copper conductors inside a copper sheath, insulated by inorganic magnesium oxide powder....
    , or MI cable. Mica
    Mica

    The mica group of sheet silicate minerals includes several closely related materials having highly perfect basal cleavage. All are monoclinic with a tendency towards pseudo-hexagonal crystals and are similar in chemical composition....
     insulated cables have also demonstrated a measure of circuit integrity for small cables.


Testing and Certification


In Canada
Canada

Canada is a country occupying most of northern North America, extending from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west and northward into the Arctic Ocean....
, testing is run in accordance with ULC-S101, as required by the local building code
Building code

A building code, or building control, is a set of rules that specify the minimum acceptable level of safety for constructed objects such as buildings and nonbuilding structures....
. Unfortunately, S101 is ill equipped to deal realistically with circuit integrity, particularly for enclosures. For circuit integrity cables, one simply uses a full scale wall panel test, loops the cables through the fire, energises the cables and quantifies the current carrying capacity of the cables during the fire.

There are two ways of achieving circuit integrity. One may either choose mineral insulated or otherwise fire-resistant (tested for that purpose) cables, or one may use an enclosure that was tested for that purpose. This is where "grandfathered" systems still find acceptance in certain parts in North America. A prime example of this is Canada
Canada

Canada is a country occupying most of northern North America, extending from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west and northward into the Arctic Ocean....
, where the code indicates that 2" of concrete
Concrete

Concrete is a construction material composed of cement as well as other cementitious materials such as fly ash and slag cement, construction aggregate , water , and Chemistry admixtures....
 coverage over or around electrical circuits is sufficient to obtain an unquantified duration of circuit integrity. No testing documentation exists to qualify this measure, according to the Institute for Research in Construction, a part of the National Research Council of Canada
National Research Council of Canada

The National Research Council is Canada's leading organization for scientific research and development....
. 2" of concrete, regardless of the conductor configuration, percentage fill, etc. is of course a judgment call.

Inherently fire resistive cables can be tested to , whereas enclosures for cables that are not inherently fire resistive can be tested to UL
Underwriters Laboratories

Underwriters Laboratories Inc. is a U.S. privately owned and operated, independent, third party product safety testing and certification organization....
 1724 or USNRC
Nuclear Regulatory Commission

Nuclear Regulatory Commission is a United States government agency that was established by the Energy Reorganization Act of 1974 in 1974, and was first opened January 19, 1975....
  in North America, or in the United Kingdom
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 or in Germany
Germany

Germany , officially the Federal Republic of Germany , is a country in Central Europe. It is bordered to the north by the North Sea, Denmark, and the Baltic Sea; to the east by Poland and the Czech Republic; to the south by Austria and Switzerland; and to the west by France, Luxembourg, Belgium, and the Netherlands....
.

The Mechanical Ducting Precedent


The other grandfathered approach is drywall
Drywall

Drywall is a common building material typically made of a layer of gypsum plaster pressed between two thick sheets of paper, then kiln dried. Drywall is used globally for the finish construction of interior walls and ceilings....
 shaftwall systems. Drywall shaftwalls were tested as a flat wall, no corners, no turns. This approach has pretty much been negated for use around ductwork (i.e. pressurisation and grease ducting, which are required to have a fire-resistance rating) since the adoption of the more suitable ISO6944 test regime by ULC as well as Underwriters Laboratories
Underwriters Laboratories

Underwriters Laboratories Inc. is a U.S. privately owned and operated, independent, third party product safety testing and certification organization....
, whereby a duct is suspended from a full scale floor slab and the enclosure is built around the duct (or an inherently fire resistant duct is similarly tested without an enclosure, since it already contains a layer of insulation), for a more realistic 3D configuration and exposure. Drywall shaftwall systems were entirely grandfathered for this application and ceased to be legally representative of due diligence the instant a properly and purposely tested system with bona fide listings became available. The same thing applies to circuit integrity enclosures.

For the mechanical ductwork, a Canadian entrepreneur got ISO6944 passed by the ULC Standards Council and then performed testing. This made all grandfathered systems legally indefencible.

This has yet to occur in Canada for circuit integrity, but it has long been standard construction work in Europe and also in the US, through work done by UL and other laboratories. Since UL is accredited by the in Canada
Canada

Canada is a country occupying most of northern North America, extending from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west and northward into the Arctic Ocean....
 and its listings are considered public record up all over North America including Canada, one is ill advised to use grandfathered systems for circuit integrity anywhere.

Importantly, drywall shaftwall systems have only been qualified as straight walls in panel furnaces, not 3D enclosures with corners.

Current Test Methods


Germany has standardised this sort of testing via DIN4102 Part 12, dated January 1991, Fire behaviour of building materials and elements, Fire resistance of electrical cable systems, Requirements and testing. Part 12 encompasses both enclosures for cabling and bus ducts, as well as inherently fire-resistive cables, such as mineral insulated cables. Enclosures for ductwork as well as wiring are a regular part of passive fire protection there. It is also not nearly as expensive as North American qualified approaches. Typically, lightweight mineral boards are used, such as calcium silicate
Calcium silicate

Calcium silicate is the chemical compound Ca2SiO4, also known as calcium orthosilicate and sometimes formulated 2CaO.SiO2....
 and sodium silicate
Sodium silicate

Sodium silicate is the common name for a compound sodium metasilicate, Na2SiO3, also known as water glass or liquid glass....
 bonded vermiculite
Vermiculite

Vermiculite is a natural mineral that expands with the application of heat. The expansion process is called exfoliation and it is routinely accomplished in purpose-designed commercial furnaces....
.

The North American state of the art is UL1724 Standard for Tests of Thermal Barrier Systems for Electrical System Components as well as its cousin, UL2196 Standard for Tests of Fire Resistive Cables. UL1724 had its origin with USNRC Generic Letter 86-10 Supplement 1, issued by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Nuclear Regulatory Commission

Nuclear Regulatory Commission is a United States government agency that was established by the Energy Reorganization Act of 1974 in 1974, and was first opened January 19, 1975....
. "Supplement 1" was to address lessons learned from the widely publicised Thermo-lag 330-1 scandal, following disclosures by whistleblower
Whistleblower

A whistleblower is a person who alleges misconduct. More complex definitions may be used, but the issue is that the whistleblower usually faces reprisal....
 Gerald W. Brown
Gerald W. Brown

Gerald W. Brown is an United States whistleblower who concerned himself with deficiency in passive fire protection systems in United States and Canada nuclear power plants....
, which resulted on Congressional hearings and a large amount of remedial work.

Supplement 1 is a particularly difficult and expensive test
Fire test

A fire test is a means of determining whether or not fire protection products meet minimum performance criteria as set out in a building code or other applicable legislation....
 to pass. No testing is done in anything less than a full scale fire test, running easily into 6 figure costs per burn multiplied by all the applications one desires to test. In order to pass, one must test the smallest as well as the largest application (12" and 36" cable tray, 1/2" and 6" conduit). Accordingly, the approved materials are costly, as manufacturers must get a return on the large test investment.

In concept, it is simple to devise systems that will pass the test. As far back as the 1970s, it was apparent that when one uses enough high temperature qualified insulation, such as ceramic fibre, one is assured of a rating. However, this comes at the price of significant ampacity derating. Also, the concept that more fireproofing is better, was defeated by industry tests of Thermo-lag 330-1 (which is not a fibrous insulation). No matter what was done to this material (used for fireproofing purposes over electrical circuits in full scale fire testing) by various nuclear power plant owners (USNRC licensees) who sponsored extensive testing, where more of the old Thermo-lag was applied onto the older substrate, no satisfactory results were achieved. In order for licensees to come into compliance, other methods, replacements, overlays and MI Cable were used to fix the problem. Also, since the forerunner of this testing was the USNRC, and the commercial version of it (UL1724) has undergone various revisions, the UL systems listed in the UL Building Materials directory are not necessarily qualified to the latest USNRC compliant or the latest UL version. But that does not mean that the older listings are simply discarded or that the manufacturers performed all new tests. Therefore, users must closely review the versions of the tests deemed acceptable in an end-user facility.

Ampacity Derating
Ampacity derating refers to the reduction of the ability of a cable to conduct electricity. It can be tested through the use of . The more one insulates a conductor, the less current it can conduct without damage from overheating. The result of the test referenced herein is quantified in terms of percentage. If a cable is derated by 30%, it can be used to conduct only 70% as much current, thus cable of greater cross sectional area is often needed to conduct a given amount of power. The use of intumescent
Intumescent

An intumescent is a substance which swells as a result of heat exposure, thus increasing in volume, and decreasing in density. Intumescents are typically used in passive fire protection and, in America, require listing and approval use and compliance in their installed configurations in order to comply with the law....
 "windows", which shut in case of a fire, can reduce or negate the effect of ampacity derating, subject to listing and approval use and compliance.

What Circuit Integrity Methods Are Used Where


Ordinarily, small runs of cables are individually run with cables that are fire-resistance rated on their own. Larger bundles and trays full of wiring may be less expensive to clad or wrap on the outside. The concrete cover method is most often used in Canadian construction, as the code and common practice permit this, despite the absence of testing data that gives the required "carte blanche
Carte blanche

Carte blanche is a List of French words and phrases used by English speakers to refer to :* Full Powers, delegation , or blank chequeIt may also refer to:...
" for all cables and indefinite ratings.

Cladding and Wrapping Considerations


The added weight of the wrap systems must be included in static and seismic calculations. Fireproofing of the hanging system must also be considered. Regular maintenance must be considered, as cladding and wraps are not load-bearing and can be damaged during normal building or facility operations. Ampacity-derating may be mitigated by the use of purpose-designed intumescent or mechanically/electronically activated "windows" that permit heat venting. Like everything else in passive fire protection, all such methods are subject to stringent listing and approval use and compliance.

Circuit Integrity Cable Considerations


Termination points and junction boxes, in other words the entire circuit, must be completely protected. Often, termination points are left out, providing a weak link. Therefore, some enclosures are needed to be used in conjunction with MI cables. One may run MI cable into a box in an electrical room. However, just because that room may be a "service room" and may be subject to compartmentalization (fire protection)
Compartmentalization (fire protection)

In structures, such as land-based buildings, traffic tunnels, ships, Spacecraft, or submarines, compartmentalization is the fundamental basis and aim of passive fire protection....
, this does not mean one no longer requires a rated box or wrap around the electrical outlet box or junction box where the wiring is terminated because that box may be disabled as a result of a fire within the room. The probability of electrical fires are a strong motivating factor for compartmetalisation to begin with. The cable may thus be operable but the circuit as a whole may be defeated because the junction box would not have been protected. Such omissions are not entirely uncommon in the field.

See also


  • Listing and approval use and compliance
  • Fire test
    Fire test

    A fire test is a means of determining whether or not fire protection products meet minimum performance criteria as set out in a building code or other applicable legislation....
  • Gerald W. Brown
    Gerald W. Brown

    Gerald W. Brown is an United States whistleblower who concerned himself with deficiency in passive fire protection systems in United States and Canada nuclear power plants....
  • Passive fire protection
    Passive fire protection

    Passive fire protection is an integral component of the three components of structural fire protection and fire safety in a building. PFP attempts to contain fires or slow the spread, through use of fire resistant walls, floors, and doors ....
  • Vermiculite
    Vermiculite

    Vermiculite is a natural mineral that expands with the application of heat. The expansion process is called exfoliation and it is routinely accomplished in purpose-designed commercial furnaces....
  • Fire protection
    Fire protection

    Fire protection is the study and practice of mitigating the unwanted effects of fires. It involves the study of the behaviour, compartmentalisation, suppression and investigation of fire and its related emergencies, as well as the research and development, production, testing and application of mitigating systems....
  • Mineral-insulated copper-clad cable
    Mineral-insulated copper-clad cable

    Mineral-insulated copper-clad cable is a variety of electrical cable made from copper conductors inside a copper sheath, insulated by inorganic magnesium oxide powder....
  • Firestop
    Firestop

    A firestop is a passive fire protection system of various components used to seal Penetration and Joint in Fire-resistance rating wall and/or floor assemblies, based on fire testing and certification listings....
  • Certification listing
    Certification listing

    A Certification listing is a document against which a field installation is compared to make sure that it complies with a regulation, such as a building code....


External links

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