
An arc flash incident such as this one (captured on video) can have deadly consequences.
You don’t need to be Ben Franklin with a kite,
a key and a wicked thunderstorm to know that
electricity is dangerous. If you’ve ever seen
an arc flash in person or on video, you’re well aware
of the frightening force that an errant electrical current
can pack. As a result, you know how important it is to
take appropriate measures to minimize injury and avoid
potentially fatal situations for employees who work
with or near energized equipment.
We all know that some types of clothing are flammable
— cotton and polyester, to name two. What
many may not realize, however, is that under some
exposure conditions — such as an arc flash — these
flammable clothing fibers can ignite even when
worn beneath flame-resistant (FR) clothing.
That’s why it’s so important for safety managers
to rethink the standards they maintain for their
employees’ personal protective equipment (PPE) and
to require workers to layer only FR clothing in order
to provide maximum safety — and comfort — and
to achieve the required arc rating.
Is your PPE adequate?
In brief, an arc flash is an electrical phenomenon that
results when electricity flows through a medium that
it shouldn’t. In most cases, that medium is air, which
becomes like a piece of copper in the way it conducts
electricity. With air, however, you can see the massive
discharge of the electrons from the discharging element.
This is the arc flash, and you can think of it as a
lightning bolt on a smaller, yet more deadly, scale.
The most common causes of arc flashes are equipment
failure, human error such as the improper
placement of tools or improper use of equipment, or
the conduction of electricity due to foreign particles
in the air (often metal shavings). But whatever the
cause, a worker’s greatest fear with an arc flash is
that its force may be powerful enough to break open
all the FR clothing outer layers and ignite a non-FR
layer that’s being worn
as a base underneath.
This set of circumstances
can result in
more severe burn injuries
to an expanded
area of the body due
to a “chimney effect”
in which cotton, for
example, will burn
underneath the FR layers
onto areas of the
worker’s body that
were not exposed by the arc flash. Polyester garments
will result in even worse injury — the material
can melt and drip onto skin and into wounds.
Layer only with FR clothing
In 2009, the National Fire Protection Association
(NFPA) 70E Standard for Electrical Safety in the
Workplace was revised to address safety gaps and
increase electrical worker protection. The new 70E
Standard permits cotton clothing to be worn as a
base layer beneath a worker’s PPE, but the cotton
layer does not count toward the PPE’s required
arc rating.
Because of the safety hazards posed by cotton and
the fact that it isn’t considered protective layering by
the NFPA, it makes sense for workers to eliminate
cotton and other flammable materials altogether and
layer only with FR clothing. In fact, Annex M of
the NFPA 70E regulations states, “the use of all FR
clothing layers will result in achieving the required
arc rating with the lowest number of layers and the
lowest clothing system weight.”
As Annex M also notes, to achieve, for example,
a total system arc rating of 40 cal/cm2, an arc flash
suit with an arc rating of 40 cal/cm2 could be worn
over a cotton shirt and cotton pants. Alternatively, an
arc flash suit with a 25 cal/cm2 arc rating could be
worn over an FR shirt and FR pants with an arc rating
of 8 cal/cm2 to achieve a total system arc rating
of 40 cal/cm2. This second approach provides the
required arc rating at a lower weight and with fewer
total layers of fabric, providing the required protection
with a higher level of worker comfort
and safety.
It is important to understand that the total system
and arc rating cannot be determined by simply adding
the arc ratings of the individual layers. The only
way to determine the total system arc rating is to
conduct a multi-layer arc test on the combination of
all the layers assembled just as they would be worn.
By understanding the risks involved with arc
flashes along with the solutions available to you
through FR layering, there’s no reason you cannot
combine safety and comfort to help ensure that your
workers head home safe and sound at the end of
every shift.