majesus
Electrical
- Aug 16, 2007
- 262
I notice in Etap if you have very small impedance between buses, you will get two very different answers for an Arc Flash calculation using IEEE 1584 Method
I have uploaded a photo of my SLD here for illustration purposes:
I have the Main PDC located at the top and there is a secondary PDC (QMQB) about 10ft on the opposite side of the electrical room. Etap won't let you directly connect bus bars together so for initial simulation purposes, I just put a very small impedance (Z2) in between them with a value of 0.001 ohms for R,X,Y. This small value should be insignificant, and the two bus bars should be technically at the same fault. As shown, the short circuit was calculated to be 30kA on both bus bars. However, on the bottom bus I get an arc current of 24kA and an energy level of 11.99cal/cm2. But on the top bus bar, it blows up. The arc current is 24kA, but the energy is 8421 cal/cm2. Can anyone give me a suggestion as why? Is this an Etap algorithm problem? Maybe it is an issue with convergence?
I can fix the problem by putting a more realistic value for Z2.
I have uploaded a photo of my SLD here for illustration purposes:
I have the Main PDC located at the top and there is a secondary PDC (QMQB) about 10ft on the opposite side of the electrical room. Etap won't let you directly connect bus bars together so for initial simulation purposes, I just put a very small impedance (Z2) in between them with a value of 0.001 ohms for R,X,Y. This small value should be insignificant, and the two bus bars should be technically at the same fault. As shown, the short circuit was calculated to be 30kA on both bus bars. However, on the bottom bus I get an arc current of 24kA and an energy level of 11.99cal/cm2. But on the top bus bar, it blows up. The arc current is 24kA, but the energy is 8421 cal/cm2. Can anyone give me a suggestion as why? Is this an Etap algorithm problem? Maybe it is an issue with convergence?
I can fix the problem by putting a more realistic value for Z2.