Skip to main content

Arc Flash Calculator

IEEE 1584-2018 incident energy analysis with PPE category determination per NFPA 70E. Includes ±15% arcing current variation and arc flash boundary calculation.

System Parameters

Affects incident energy by up to 300% — IEEE 1584-2018 Table 1

Advanced Settings

0 = auto per IEEE 1584 Table 3

0 = auto per NFPA 70E Table 130.7(C)(15)(b)

0 = auto per IEEE 1584-2018 Table B.1

0 = auto per IEEE 1584-2018 Table B.1

0 = auto per IEEE 1584-2018 Table B.1

Enter parameters and click Calculate to see arc flash analysis.

An arc flash is a dangerous release of energy caused by an electric arc between conductors or from a conductor to ground. IEEE 1584-2018 Clause 4 defines the incident energy calculation model used to determine arc flash hazard levels, working distances, and required personal protective equipment categories for personnel safety in electrical installations.

How to Perform an Arc Flash Study

  1. 1
    Collect system single-line diagramGather the facility single-line diagram showing all equipment, protective devices, transformer ratings, cable sizes, and bus configurations. Accurate data is essential for reliable incident energy calculations.
  2. 2
    Determine available fault currentCalculate the bolted three-phase fault current at each bus using the impedance method per IEC 60909-0. Include contributions from utility supply, generators, and motor loads.[IEEE 1584-2018 Clause 4.2]
  3. 3
    Determine protective device clearing timeObtain time-current curves for every protective device and determine the total clearing time at the calculated arcing current. Include relay operating time plus breaker opening time.[IEEE 1584-2018 Clause 4.3]
  4. 4
    Calculate arcing currentUse the IEEE 1584-2018 model to estimate the arcing current from the bolted fault current, system voltage, electrode gap, and enclosure configuration. The model provides both maximum and reduced arcing current values.[IEEE 1584-2018 Clause 4.4]
  5. 5
    Calculate incident energyApply the IEEE 1584 incident energy equations using arcing current, clearing time, working distance, electrode configuration, and enclosure dimensions. Calculate for both maximum and reduced arcing current scenarios.[IEEE 1584-2018 Clause 4.5]
  6. 6
    Determine arc flash boundaryCalculate the distance at which incident energy falls to 1.2 cal/cm2, the threshold for onset of second-degree burns. This defines the arc flash protection boundary for the equipment.[IEEE 1584-2018 Clause 4.7]
  7. 7
    Select appropriate PPE categoryBased on the maximum incident energy at the working distance, determine the required PPE category from NFPA 70E Table 130.7(C)(15)(c). Categories range from 1 (4 cal/cm2) to 4 (40 cal/cm2).[NFPA 70E Table 130.7(C)(15)(c)]
  8. 8
    Create arc flash warning labelsGenerate equipment labels showing incident energy, arc flash boundary, required PPE, shock hazard distance, and limited/restricted approach boundaries. Labels must comply with NFPA 70E 130.5(H).[NFPA 70E Section 130.5(H)]

How Arc Flash Works

The arc flash calculator estimates incident energy levels and arc flash boundaries per the IEEE 1584:2018 empirical model, enabling proper PPE selection and safe working distances.

The IEEE 1584:2018 model uses a multi-step calculation: first determining the arcing current from the bolted fault current using equipment-specific regression equations for voltages from 208V to 15kV. The incident energy is then calculated based on the arcing current, arc duration (set by protective device clearing time), working distance, electrode configuration (VCB, VCBB, HCB, VOA, HOA), and enclosure dimensions.

The arc flash boundary is the distance at which incident energy drops to 1.2 cal/cm2 (5.0 J/cm2) — the threshold for second-degree burns. NFPA 70E:2024 Table 130.7(C)(15)(a) maps incident energy ranges to PPE categories (1 through 4). Results include incident energy at working distance, arc flash boundary, PPE category, NFPA 70E hazard warning label data, and boundary visualization.

NFPA 70E PPE Categories vs Incident Energy

PPE CategoryIncident Energy (cal/cm²)Minimum Arc RatingTypical Equipment
1≤ 44 cal/cm²Arc-rated shirt and pants
2≤ 88 cal/cm²Plus face shield and balaclava
3≤ 2525 cal/cm²Arc flash suit with hood
4≤ 4040 cal/cm²Multi-layer arc flash suit
Dangerous> 40Live work prohibited

Source: NFPA 70E-2024 Table 130.7(C)(15)(a)

Frequently Asked Questions

What is arc flash incident energy and how is it calculated per IEEE 1584:2018?
Incident energy is the thermal energy (in cal/cm2 or J/cm2) that would be received by a surface at a specified working distance during an arc flash event. IEEE 1584:2018 uses empirically-derived equations based on system voltage (208V-15kV), bolted fault current, gap between conductors, enclosure type, and arc duration. The calculation first determines the arcing current (Iarc) using Equation 1, then calculates incident energy (E) using Equation 4. The 2018 edition introduced electrode configuration variations (VCB, VCBB, HCB, VOA, HOA) significantly improving accuracy over the 2002 edition.
What is the arc flash boundary and how is it determined?
The arc flash boundary is the distance from the arc source at which the incident energy equals 1.2 cal/cm2, the onset threshold for a second-degree burn per IEEE 1584:2018 Clause 4.6. It is calculated by solving the incident energy equation for the distance that yields exactly 1.2 cal/cm2. Workers within this boundary must wear appropriate arc-rated PPE. For typical 480V switchgear with 30kA fault current and 0.5s clearing time, the arc flash boundary can extend 5-10 feet from the equipment.
How do I select the correct PPE category per NFPA 70E?
NFPA 70E Table 130.7(C)(15)(a) defines four PPE categories based on incident energy ranges: Category 1 (4 cal/cm2), Category 2 (8 cal/cm2), Category 3 (25 cal/cm2), and Category 4 (40 cal/cm2). Above 40 cal/cm2, no standard PPE is considered adequate and the hazard must be mitigated by engineering controls such as remote racking, faster protection, or current-limiting devices. Alternatively, NFPA 70E Table 130.7(C)(15)(b) provides a simplified PPE category lookup based on equipment type and available fault current without detailed incident energy calculation.
How does protective device speed reduce arc flash hazard?
Arc flash incident energy is approximately proportional to arcing duration, making protective device speed the single most effective mitigation measure. Reducing clearing time from 0.5 seconds to 0.05 seconds (using zone-selective interlocking or bus differential protection) can reduce incident energy by approximately 90%. IEEE 1584:2018 calculations directly use the total clearing time of the upstream protective device. Strategies include applying instantaneous trip settings, arc flash relays (per IEEE C37.246), current-limiting fuses (clearing in less than 0.01s), and maintenance mode settings on adjustable breakers.
What working distances does IEEE 1584 use for different equipment?
IEEE 1584:2018 Table 3 specifies typical working distances based on equipment class: 455mm (18 inches) for low-voltage switchgear and panelboards, 610mm (24 inches) for low-voltage motor control centres, 910mm (36 inches) for medium-voltage switchgear, and 455mm for cable junction boxes. These distances represent the typical distance from a worker's face and torso to the potential arc source during normal operation and maintenance. Using a shorter working distance in calculations results in higher incident energy, so accurate distance measurement is critical for proper PPE selection.
Is arc flash analysis required by law or just best practice?
In the United States, OSHA 29 CFR 1910.335 requires employers to provide appropriate PPE for electrical hazards, and NFPA 70E is the recognized industry standard for determining arc flash hazards. NEC Article 110.16 mandates arc flash warning labels on service equipment, switchboards, panelboards, industrial control panels, and motor control centres likely to require examination, adjustment, or maintenance while energised. In Australia, AS/NZS 4836 covers safe working on or near electrical installations, and in the UK, the Electricity at Work Regulations 1989 impose a general duty to prevent danger from electrical energy.
Why did IEEE 1584-2018 completely replace the Lee method, and how much do the results differ for typical LV switchgear?
The 2018 revision replaced the entire empirical model with equations derived from over 1,800 additional tests covering enclosures up to 49 inches wide, voltages from 208 V to 15 kV, and new electrode configurations including VCB and VCBB. The Lee method (from Ralph Lee's 1982 paper) treats the arc as a point source of spherical radiation and is now only permitted for systems above 15 kV per Clause 4.9. The differences are dramatic: for typical LV MCC (480 V, 30 kA, 0.5 s clearing, 24-inch enclosure, VCB configuration), the 2002 model calculated approximately 15 cal/cm2, while the 2018 model typically yields 20-25 cal/cm2 due to better modelling of the enclosure focusing effect. Many facilities previously rated for HRC2 under the 2002 model now require HRC3 or HRC4 under 2018.
How does electrode configuration change the incident energy by up to 300%, and which configuration should you use for each type of equipment?
IEEE 1584-2018 introduced five electrode configurations in Clause 4.2: VCB (vertical conductors in a box), VCBB (vertical conductors terminated in an insulating barrier), HCB (horizontal conductors in a box), VOA (vertical conductors in open air), and HOA (horizontal conductors in open air). VCBB is the most dangerous because the arc plasma jets outward toward the worker when driven into the barrier. At 480 V, 20 kA, 0.3 s, 610 mm working distance: VOA gives approximately 3.2 cal/cm2 (HRC1) while VCBB gives approximately 12.8 cal/cm2 (HRC3), a 4x difference for identical electrical parameters. Annex D guidance: switchboards and panelboards use VCBB, MCCs use VCB, open switchyard use VOA, cable junctions use HCB. Selecting the wrong configuration is the single largest source of error in modern arc flash studies.
Why does reducing the bolted fault current sometimes increase the arc flash incident energy?
This is the 'incident energy paradox' documented in IEEE 1584-2018 Annex B.2.2. At lower bolted fault currents, the arcing current drops, but the protective device takes longer to clear because it operates further down its time-current curve. Consider a 480 V system with a 1600 A breaker (instantaneous at 19.2 kA). At 25 kA bolted fault, arcing current is approximately 16 kA, the breaker trips instantaneously in 0.05 s, giving 4.5 cal/cm2. After adding a reactor to reduce bolted fault to 15 kA, arcing current drops to 9.8 kA, below the instantaneous pickup, so the breaker operates on short-time delay at 0.3 s, giving 22 cal/cm2. The 'safety improvement' increased incident energy nearly 5x. The correct mitigation is to simultaneously adjust protective device settings when reducing fault current.
IEEE 1584-2018 requires calculating a reduced arcing current variation. What is this and why does it often govern the PPE requirement?
Clause 4.9 requires calculating incident energy at both the full arcing current and a reduced arcing current, then using the higher result. The reduced current (I_arc_min) applies a variation factor from Table 4 ranging from 15% to 40% below the calculated arcing current for systems below 600 V. Real arc currents fluctuate due to plasma instability and electrode erosion. A lower arc current means the protective device takes longer to operate. Since incident energy is proportional to I2 x t, if the time increase outweighs the I2 decrease, net energy rises. At 480 V with 25 kA bolted fault and a 2000 A breaker, full arcing current of 14.5 kA clears in 0.08 s giving 6.2 cal/cm2, while the reduced arcing current (12.3 kA) clears in 0.15 s giving 8.9 cal/cm2. Failing to check this scenario is a common gap in studies updated from the 2002 edition.
At what point does the arc flash boundary calculation become more important than incident energy, and why do many engineers ignore it?
The arc flash boundary (AFB) is the distance where incident energy equals 1.2 cal/cm2, the onset of second-degree burn per IEEE 1584-2018 Clause 4.6. While studies focus on incident energy at working distance, the AFB determines the radius within which ALL personnel need PPE. For MV switchgear (4160 V, 30 kA, 0.5 s clearing), the incident energy at working distance might be 18 cal/cm2, but the AFB can extend to 6-8 metres, often beyond the switchroom door. The distance exponent in Equation 4.5 ranges from 0.8 to 2.5 and varies with voltage, current, and electrode configuration, so energy does not follow a simple inverse-square law. At low exponents (common at lower voltages), energy decays slowly with distance, producing very large AFB values. Many facilities post labels for PPE at working distance but fail to mark the AFB perimeter as required by NFPA 70E 130.7(A).

Standard-Specific Guides

Related Calculators

Related Guides & Examples

Key Terms

Related FAQ

Standards Reference

  • IEEE 1584:2018 — Arc flash calculation methods
  • NFPA 70E:2024 — Electrical safety
  • CSA Z462 — Workplace electrical safety