Touch Voltage
Touch voltage is the potential difference between simultaneously accessible conductive parts that a person could contact during an earth fault. IEC 61140 establishes permissible touch voltage limits — typically 50 volts AC in normal conditions and 25 volts AC in wet locations. Protective earthing and bonding systems must ensure touch voltages remain below these thresholds throughout fault duration.
Detailed Explanation
During an earth fault, current flowing through the earthing system creates voltage gradients on exposed metalwork and the ground surface. Touch voltage is the potential difference a person would experience if they simultaneously contacted an energised conductive part (such as a faulted equipment enclosure) and the ground or another earthed part. The conventional touch voltage limit of 50V AC rms is based on body impedance research: at this voltage, the current through the human body remains below the threshold for ventricular fibrillation under most conditions. In wet locations, bathrooms, swimming pools, and medical facilities, the limit is reduced to 25V or even 12V because wet skin has lower impedance. Protective equipotential bonding connects all accessible metalwork to the same earthing point, minimising voltage differences between touchable surfaces. In TN systems, touch voltage during a fault is Ut = If × RPE, where If is the fault current and RPE is the protective conductor resistance. The protective device must disconnect the supply before touch voltage becomes dangerous — hence the time-dependent touch voltage curves in IEC 60479-1.
Standard References
| Standard | Clause | Relevance |
|---|---|---|
| IEC 61140 | Clause 7 | Permissible touch voltage limits for protection against electric shock |
| BS 7671:2018 | Regulation 411.3.1.1 | Touch voltage limits and protective bonding requirements |
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