Overview
FrançaisABSTRACT
ATEX regulations concern the placing on the market of equipment and protective systems intended for use in explosive atmospheres. A variety of techniques are used to design electrical equipment used in industries where ignition sources may be found (refining, fine chemicals, paints, inks, solvents, etc.). This article explains the protection principles used in case of danger, as well as the different constructional requirements of ATEX equipment. The general rules of construction and the specific rules for each piece of equipment or system concerned are listed herein.
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Read the articleAUTHOR
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Thierry HOUEIX: Certification delegate and technical advisor - French National Institute for the Industrial Environment and Risks
INTRODUCTION
An atmosphere made up of a mixture of air and a combustible substance can be ignited, under certain conditions of temperature and concentration, by a spark or an electric arc, by an object or part of an object heated to a high temperature, by a mechanical spark or by the sudden release of static electrical charges accumulated on insulating or insulated materials.
Electrical and non-electrical equipment intended for use in such atmospheres must therefore be specially designed to avoid creating these different sources of ignition.
The solutions adopted to make equipment safe depend on the state of the flammable substance and its nature.
Rules for the construction of electrical equipment for use in potentially explosive atmospheres are set out in the EN 60079 series of standards, which recently replaced the former European standards EN 50014 to 28 and EN 50281-1-1.
Our ambition in this dossier is twofold:
enable readers who are not familiar with the standards to gain a fairly precise idea of the solutions adopted to protect equipment against the risk of explosion, and of the constraints that these solutions may entail;
clarify the consequences of certain provisions for readers who have already read or are familiar with the standards, which may not be readily apparent to a person unfamiliar with these techniques.
In order to better achieve these aims, the construction rules quoted follow scrupulously the order in which the contents of each of the standards commented on are presented. This in no way dispenses with the need to possess the standards in order to design equipment and prove its compliance with the requirements of Annex II of ATEX Directive 94/9/EC. Readers wishing to disregard the standards would be in serious trouble.
The terms "explosive" and "explosive" appear on numerous occasions in this dossier. It is therefore important to make it clear from the outset that, even if some of the texts quoted in the article introduce a difference in meaning between these terms, they should in fact be considered perfectly synonymous.
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Electrical equipment for use in potentially explosive atmospheres
Bibliography
- (1) - Les mélanges explosifs. - Gaz et vapeurs, INRS ED 911 (2004) http://www.inrs.fr/accueil/produits/mediatheque/doc/publications.html?refINRS=ED%20911
Also in our database
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Websites
European Commission http://www.ec.europa.eu/enterprise/sectors/mechanical/atex/index_en.htm
INERIS, ATEX regulations page https://aida.ineris.fr/liste_documents/1/17743/1
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Standards and norms
- Electrical equipment for use in the presence of combustible dust – Part 1-1: Electrical equipment protected by enclosures – Construction and testing - EN 50281-1-1 - 2000
- Rotating electrical machines – Part 5: Degrees of protection provided by the integral design of rotating electrical machines (IP code) – Classification - EN 60034-5 - 2001
- Explosive atmospheres – Part 0: General rules - EN 60079-0 - 2009 ...
Regulations
Directive 94/9/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 23 March 1994 on the approximation of the laws of the Member States concerning equipment and protective systems intended for use in potentially explosive atmospheres Official Journal of the European Communities L 100, 19/04/1994, p. 0001-0029
Directive 1999/92/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 16 December 1999 on minimum...
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