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Product Release: ABB LV Products Arc Guard System




NEW BERLIN, Wis. - The ABB Low Voltage Products division has released TVOC-2, a new generation of its proprietary Arc Guard System™ that has been protecting electrical equipment from dangerous electrical arc flashes for over 35 years. TVOC-2 features numerous upgrades and new functions to provide superior arch flash protection, detecting faults in low and medium voltage switchgear and disconnecting the power provided to the arc within 30 to 50 milliseconds, preventing serious injury to personnel and damage to expensive equipment. Without the Arc Guard System an arc flash will typically trip a circuit breaker in approximately one second, enough time for the arc to destroy the switchgear and kill or seriously injure a person. TVOC-2 is now UL listed, and when installed along with ABB’s Emax circuit breakers, carries a functional safety rating of SIL-2 as certified by TÜV Rheinland, the leading independent global provider of safety analysis.  The SIL-2 certification confirms that the TVOC-2 has achieved the standard required to protect both humans and equipment.

“The SIL-2 rating is especially important because it allows the TVOC-2 Arc Guard system to be used where an engineered safety solution is required,” said Steve Zbytowski, PE, product manager of control gear at ABB. “The rating makes the TVOC-2 a totally unique product in today’s market.”

An arc flash is a strong electric current, and often a major explosion, that passes through air when insulation between electrical conductors is no longer sufficient to contain the voltage within them, creating a short that allows electricity to race from conductor-to-conductor1.  Arc flashes can emit heat up to 35,000° F, four times the surface temperature of the sun. It is estimated that five to ten arc flashes occur in the US every day, causing one to two daily fatalities2.  Despite conscientious attempts to design systems that inherently reduce risk, mechanical measures often fail because most accidents occur with the switchgear door open, and electrical breaker protection is solely based on delayed over-current stoppages. The main cause of arc flashes is human error and 65% occur when an operator is working on the switchgear.

The Arc Guard system can detect an arc flash in less than one millisecond, and depending on the disconnecting device, it will typically disconnect the power to the switchgear within 30 to 50 milliseconds.  This will not prevent the accident, but it will significantly reduce the damage.

The Arc Guard System uses light as the main condition to instantaneously trip the incoming circuit-breaker, responding in milliseconds and overriding slower protection elements.  The system acts in three phases:

    Detection - on optical sensor senses when light (an arc flash) is inside the equipment
    Recognition - the arc monitor determines the intensity of the light
    Action - the TVOC-2 sends a signal to trip the breaker(s)

Short circuit protection alone is not enough to provide the necessary response time because power distribution systems often include a required selectivity designed to achieve desired plant efficiencies and ensure power availability. This selectivity delays the breakers tripping in the necessary time. The Arc Guard System, along with properly specified circuit breakers, overrides the protection delays within the necessary timeframes to minimize injuries and equipment damage.

“ABB has over 35 years of experience detecting arc faults with the predecessors to the TVOC-2,” said Zbytowski.  “While we are proud of that history, we weren’t satisfied with only protecting equipment. Our goal, which is now realized, was to gain the TÜV certified SIL-2 rating allowing the TVOC-2 to be used in engineered safety solutions.”

In addition to achieving the functional safety design as approved through rigorous third party testing and certification, the feature upgrades of TVOC-2 provide significant system enhancements, including:

Reliability:

    Pre-calibrated optical sensors and fiber optic point sensors
    Hardware based self monitoring system for critical functions; the software is used only for supervision and information processing
    Wide ranging input voltage ratings (100 to 240 V AC and 100 to 250 V DC)
    Selective tripping of only the affected circuit breaker, not all breakers within a system

Flexibility:

    The HMI can be mounted on the TVOC-2 or panel door
    Standard system has 10 sensor inputs, expandable to 30

§        The system can be configured according to specification

Simplicity:

    User-friendly start-up menu, easy to install

§        Mounting options on DIN-Rail or directly on a panel wall

    Easy to expand as the switchgear grows

 

The Arc Guard System is also compatible with an extremely wide range of applications, including new or OEM installations, and old equipment soon to be out-of-date without a safety upgrade. It can also be installed on systems of all sizes and values, from $10,000 switchgear up to systems in excess of $1,000,000.  Some of the industry segments and applications that can benefit from Arc Guard include substations; critical power facilities such as hospitals and data centers; yachts; cruise and refrigerated container ships; oil rigs; chemical plants; railroad - trains and way stations; steel mills; and wind/solar power facilities.

1. As defined by the IEEE and the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA)

2. As reported by Capelli-Schellpfeffer, Inc.

 

 

 

About ABB
ABB (www.abb.com) is a leader in power and automation technologies that enable utility and industry customers to improve performance while lowering environmental impact. The ABB Group of companies operates in around 100 countries and employs about 130,000 people.

 

About ABB Low Voltage Products

The ABB Low Voltage Products division (www.abb.us/lowvoltage) manufactures low-voltage circuit breakers, switches, control products, wiring accessories, enclosures and cable systems to protect people, installations and electronic equipment from electrical overload.





Contact FacilitiesNet Editorial Staff »   posted on: 2/23/2012


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