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Fault AnalysisAlso: thermal withstand equation, k2S2 equation, fault energy equation

Adiabatic Equation

The adiabatic equation, k-squared S-squared equals I-squared t, determines whether a conductor can withstand the thermal energy produced by a short-circuit current before the protective device clears the fault. IEC 60364-5-54 Clause 543.1 applies this equation to protective conductors, where k is a material constant, S is cross-sectional area, I is fault current, and t is disconnection time.

Detailed Explanation

During a short circuit, the enormous fault current generates heat in the conductor so rapidly that there is no time for the heat to dissipate to the surrounding insulation and environment — the process is therefore adiabatic (no heat loss). The conductor temperature rises until the protective device clears the fault. The equation k²S² ≥ I²t ensures that the conductor's thermal capacity (left side) exceeds the thermal energy delivered by the fault (right side). The k value is a material constant that depends on the conductor material (copper or aluminium) and the insulation type (PVC, XLPE, or mineral), representing the conductor's ability to absorb heat without the insulation exceeding its limiting temperature. For example, k = 115 for PVC-insulated copper conductors. If the check fails — meaning the fault energy exceeds the conductor's withstand — the engineer must either increase the conductor size or reduce the disconnection time by selecting a faster protective device. This verification is especially critical for protective conductors (earth wires), which may be smaller than the associated phase conductors.

Formula

k²S² ≥ I²t

Standard References

StandardClause
IEC 60364-5-54Clause 543.1
BS 7671:2018Regulation 543.1.3

Related Terms