HAZARDOUS LOCATION BASICS
HAZARDOUS LOCATION [NEC 500] :
An Area where the possibility of explosion and fire is created by the
presence of flammable gases, vapors, dusts, fibers or flying.
CLASS I [NEC-500.5 (B)] - Those areas in which flammable gases or vapors are or may be present in the
air in sufficient quantities to produce explosive or ignitable mixtures.
CLASS II [NEC-500.5(C)] - Those areas made hazardous by the presence of combustible dust.
CLASS III [NEC-500.5 (D)] - Those areas that are hazardous because of the presence of easily ignitible fibers or flyings, but in which such fibers or flyers are not likely to be in suspension in the air in quantities sufficient to procue ignitible mixtures.
DIVISION 1 [NEC-500.5(B)(1), 500.5(C)(1), 500.5(D)(1)] - Division One in the normal situation, the hazard would be expected to
be present in everyday production operations or during frequent repair
and maintenance activity.
DIVISION 2 [NEC-500.5(B)(2), 500.5(C)(2), 500.5(D)(2)] - Division Two in the abnormal situation, material is expected to be confined
within closed containers or closed systems and will be present only through
accidental rupture, breakage, or unusual faulty operation.
GROUPS [NEC-500.6(A)(1,2,3,4) & 500.6 (B)(1,2,3)]- The gases of vapors of Class I locations are
broken into four groups by the code. A, B, C, and D. Theses materials
are grouped according to the ignition temperature of the substance, its
explosion pressure and other flammable characteristics.
CLASS II -
dust locations - groups E, F, and G. These groups are classified according
to the ignition temperature and the conductivity of the hazardous substance.
SEALS [NEC-501.15 and 502.15] - Special fittings that are required either to prevent
the passage of hot gasses in the case of an explosion in a Class I area
of the passage of combustible dust, fibers, or flyings in a Class II or
III area.
ARTICLES 500 Through
503 (2005 NEC) - Explains in detail the requirements for the installation
of wiring of electrical equipment in hazardous locations. These articles
along with other applicable regulations, local governing inspection authorities,
insurance representatives, and qualified engineering/technical assistance
should be your guides to the installation of wiring or electrical equipment
in any hazardous or potentially hazardous location.
Typical
Class I Locations:
- Petroleum refineries,
and gasoline storage and dispensing areas.
- Industrial firms
that use flammable liquids in dip tanks for parts cleaning or other
operations.
- Petrochemical companies
that manufacture chemicals from gas and oil.
- Dry cleaning plants
where vapors from cleaning fluids can be present.
- Companies that
have spraying areas where they coat products with paint or plastics.
- Aircraft hangars
and fuel servicing areas.
- Utility gas plants,
and operations involving storage and handling of liquefied petroleum
gas or natural gas.
Typical
Class II Locations:
- Grain elevators,
flour and feed mills.
- Plants that manufacture,
use, or store magnesium or aluminum powders.
- Plants that have
chemical or metallurgical processes or plastics, medicines and fireworks,
etc.
- Producers or starch
or candies.
- Spice-grinding
plants, sugar plants and cocoa plants.
- Coal preparation
plants and other carbon-handling or processing areas.
Typical
Class III Locations:
- Textile mills,
cotton gins, cotton seed mills, and flax processing plants.
- Any plant that
shapes, pulverizes, or cuts wood and creates sawdust or flyings.
NOTE: fibers
and flyings are not likely to be suspended in the air, but can collect
around machinery or on lighting fixtures and where heat, a spark, or hot
metal can ignite them.
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