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IEC 60909-0:2016 Short-Circuit Calculations — Scope, Assumptions, and Limitations

In-depth guide to IEC 60909-0:2016 covering scope (LV and HV systems up to 550 kV), the balanced sinusoidal voltage assumption, why IEC 60909 gives conservative results, excluded equipment types, and the four fault types engineers must calculate.

IEC 60909-0:201614 min readUpdated March 6, 2026
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What IEC 60909 Covers: LV and HV Systems up to 550 kV

IEC 60909-0:2016Short-circuit currents in three-phase a.c. systems — Part 0: Calculation of currents — is the international standard for calculating short-circuit currents in three-phase AC power systems. It applies to:

  • Low-voltage (LV) systems: Up to 1 kV AC — commercial buildings, industrial plants, residential distribution
  • Medium-voltage (MV) systems: 1 kV to 36 kV — distribution switchgear, industrial substations, wind farm collector networks
  • High-voltage (HV) systems: 36 kV to 550 kV — transmission substations, power plant switchyards

The standard provides a systematic method for calculating four types of short-circuit current at any point in a network. These values are essential for:

  • Selecting switchgear: Circuit breakers and fuses must have adequate breaking capacity (≥ prospective fault current)
  • Protection coordination: Determining relay settings, discrimination, and tripping times
  • Cable thermal withstand: Verifying cables can survive the fault current for the disconnection time (adiabatic equation from IEC 60364-4-43)
  • Busbar and equipment ratings: Mechanical forces and thermal stress on busbars, transformers, and other equipment
  • Earth fault analysis: Touch and step potential calculations for earthing system design

IEC 60909 is complemented by IEC 60909-1 (factors for calculating short-circuit currents according to IEC 60909-0), IEC 60909-2 (data for the calculation), IEC 60909-3 (currents during two separate simultaneous faults), and IEC 60909-4 (short-circuit current calculation examples).

The Fundamental Assumption: Balanced Three-Phase Sinusoidal Voltage

IEC 60909 is built on a foundational assumption: the network voltage before the fault is a balanced, symmetrical, three-phase sinusoidal voltage at nominal frequency. This means:

  • All three phase voltages are equal in magnitude
  • The phase angles are exactly 120° apart
  • The frequency is exactly the nominal system frequency (50 Hz or 60 Hz)
  • There are no pre-existing harmonics, unbalance, or transients

This assumption simplifies the mathematics enormously. It allows the use of the equivalent voltage source method (Clause 5.3), which replaces the entire network on the faulted side with a single voltage source at the fault location:

Equivalent voltage source at fault location:
  U_q = c × U_n / √3

Where:
  U_n = nominal system voltage (e.g., 400 V, 11 kV, 33 kV)
  c   = voltage factor from Table 1 of IEC 60909-0

Voltage factors (Table 1):
  Voltage level        c_max    c_min
  LV (100–1000 V)     1.05     0.95
  MV/HV (>1–550 kV)   1.10     1.00

The voltage factor c accounts for the following real-world variations that the balanced-sinusoidal assumption ignores:

  • Voltage variations due to load flow and transformer tap positions
  • Pre-fault voltage at the fault location being different from nominal
  • Sub-transient behaviour of generators and motors

Using cmax gives the maximum short-circuit current (for equipment rating), while cmin gives the minimum short-circuit current (for protection sensitivity).

Why IEC 60909 Gives Conservative (Not Exact) Results

IEC 60909 is intentionally designed to give conservative results — that is, the calculated short-circuit currents are slightly higher than what would occur in a real installation. This conservatism is deliberate and stems from several simplifications:

  1. All generators are at maximum output: The method assumes all connected generators are operating at maximum short-circuit contribution, even though in reality some may be lightly loaded or disconnected.
  2. All motors contribute: All connected motors are assumed to contribute sub-transient current to the fault, regardless of their actual loading at the instant of fault. Motor contributions can be significant — a typical induction motor contributes 4–6 times its rated current to a nearby fault.
  3. Network impedances are at minimum: The utility source impedance is based on the maximum declared fault level (minimum impedance), giving the highest possible current from the network.
  4. No fault arc resistance: The method assumes a bolted (zero-impedance) fault. In reality, arc resistance at the fault point reduces the fault current, sometimes significantly (especially at lower voltages where the arc length is a larger proportion of the total impedance).
  5. Voltage factor cmax: Using a voltage factor greater than 1.0 artificially increases the driving voltage, further inflating the calculated fault current.

The degree of conservatism depends on the system configuration:

System TypeTypical ConservatismPrimary Source
LV distribution (utility-fed)5–15%Voltage factor + arc resistance ignored
Industrial LV (with motors)10–25%Motor contribution overestimate
MV distribution5–10%Voltage factor + generator assumptions
HV transmission3–8%Voltage factor (system is closer to ideal)
Why conservatism is acceptable: The primary purpose of short-circuit calculations is to ensure equipment can safely withstand and interrupt fault currents. Oversizing (conservative calculation) results in slightly more expensive but safer equipment. Undersizing (non-conservative calculation) risks catastrophic equipment failure, arc flash, and potential injury or death. The IEC 60909 conservatism is therefore an intentional safety margin, not a calculation error.

Excluded Equipment: HVDC, Arc Furnaces, and VFDs

IEC 60909 explicitly excludes or provides limited guidance for several types of equipment whose fault behaviour does not conform to the balanced sinusoidal model:

HVDC Converters

High-voltage direct-current (HVDC) converter stations are excluded from the scope of IEC 60909. HVDC converters use power electronic switching that produces non-sinusoidal waveforms and has complex fault response characteristics that depend on the converter control system. The fault contribution from an HVDC converter can range from zero (if the converter blocks) to several times rated current (if the converter operates in overcurrent mode during the fault). Specialised studies using electromagnetic transient (EMT) simulation software (PSCAD, EMTP) are required for HVDC fault analysis.

Arc Furnaces

Electric arc furnaces (EAFs) produce highly non-linear, asymmetric, and time-varying currents even during normal operation. Their fault contribution and the interaction between the arc furnace's supply and a nearby short circuit cannot be modelled using the symmetric impedance approach of IEC 60909. EAF installations typically require detailed harmonic and transient studies.

Variable Frequency Drives (VFDs)

Variable frequency drives (also known as variable speed drives or inverter drives) present two challenges for IEC 60909:

  • On the supply side: The VFD's rectifier input is a non-linear load that does not produce a sinusoidal current waveform. However, for fault calculation purposes, the VFD's contribution to a supply-side fault is typically limited to its rated current (or slightly above), as the power electronic devices rapidly limit the current.
  • On the motor side: A fault on the output (motor-side) of a VFD does not produce the same fault current as a direct-on-line motor. The VFD's current limit function will typically restrict fault current to 150–200% of rated current, far below the 4–6× sub-transient contribution of a DOL motor.

For practical purposes, VFD-fed motors are typically excluded from the motor contribution calculation in IEC 60909, and their supply-side fault contribution is modelled as limited to rated current. This is noted in IEC 60909-0, Clause 3.17 and Clause 12.

Other Exclusions

  • Static compensators (STATCOMs, SVCs): Power electronic reactive power compensation devices with complex fault response
  • Battery energy storage systems: Inverter-based systems with current-limited fault contribution
  • Photovoltaic inverters: Typically contribute only 1.0–1.5× rated current during faults

The Four Fault Types and When to Calculate Each

IEC 60909 defines methods for calculating four distinct types of short-circuit fault. Each has a different physical mechanism and different practical applications:

Fault TypeSymbolDescriptionWhen to Calculate
Three-phaseI"k3All three phases shorted together (bolted)Equipment rating (breaking capacity), busbar mechanical forces
Line-to-lineI"k2Two phases shorted togetherMinimum fault current for protection sensitivity (often lower than 3φ)
Line-to-line-to-earthI"k2ETwo phases shorted together and to earthEarth fault relay settings, touch voltage calculations
Line-to-earthI"k1Single phase shorted to earthEarth fault protection, earthing system design, step/touch potential

The three-phase fault typically gives the highest fault current and is used for equipment rating. However, in some system configurations (particularly near large generators or in systems with high zero-sequence impedance), the single-phase-to-earth fault can actually produce a higher current than the three-phase fault.

The calculation method uses symmetrical components (positive, negative, and zero sequence impedances) to decompose the unbalanced faults into balanced components:

Three-phase fault:
  I"_k3 = c × U_n / (√3 × Z_1)

Line-to-line fault:
  I"_k2 = c × U_n / (Z_1 + Z_2)
        ≈ (√3 / 2) × I"_k3    (when Z_1 ≈ Z_2)
        ≈ 0.866 × I"_k3

Line-to-earth fault:
  I"_k1 = √3 × c × U_n / (Z_1 + Z_2 + Z_0)
        = 3 × c × U_n / (√3 × (Z_1 + Z_2 + Z_0))

Where:
  Z_1 = positive-sequence impedance (normal load impedance)
  Z_2 = negative-sequence impedance (≈ Z_1 for static equipment)
  Z_0 = zero-sequence impedance (depends on transformer winding
        configuration and earthing arrangement)

The zero-sequence impedance Z0 is highly dependent on the transformer winding configuration (Dyn, Yyn, Dzn, etc.) and the earthing system. A Dyn11 transformer has a relatively low Z0 (allowing high earth fault currents), while a Yyn0 transformer without a delta tertiary has a very high Z0 (restricting earth fault currents). This is why transformer configuration is a critical input to any IEC 60909 calculation.

Key Calculated Parameters

IEC 60909 does not just calculate a single "fault current" value. It defines several distinct parameters, each relevant to a different design decision:

ParameterSymbolTime FrameUsed For
Initial symmetrical short-circuit currentI"kFirst half-cycle (RMS)Equipment fault ratings, relay pickup settings
Peak short-circuit currentipFirst peak (~5–10 ms)Busbar mechanical forces, switchgear making capacity
Symmetrical breaking currentIbAt breaker contact separation (~30–80 ms)Circuit breaker breaking capacity selection
Steady-state short-circuit currentIkAfter transients decay (>0.5 s)Thermal withstand of equipment, generator protection
Thermal equivalent currentIthIntegrated over fault durationCable thermal withstand (adiabatic equation)

The peak current ip is calculated from I"k using the peak factor κ:

i_p = κ × √2 × I"_k

Where κ depends on the R/X ratio at the fault point:
  κ = 1.02 + 0.98 × e^(-3 × R/X)

Typical values:
  R/X = 0.1 (HV transmission):  κ ≈ 1.76,  i_p ≈ 2.49 × I"_k
  R/X = 0.3 (MV distribution):  κ ≈ 1.41,  i_p ≈ 2.00 × I"_k
  R/X = 0.5 (LV distribution):  κ ≈ 1.23,  i_p ≈ 1.74 × I"_k

For LV systems (where R/X is typically 0.3–0.8), the DC offset decays rapidly and the peak factor is relatively modest. For HV systems (R/X < 0.1), the DC offset is large and persistent, making the peak current nearly 2.5 times the RMS value.

Practical Application in ECalPro

ECalPro's short-circuit calculator implements the IEC 60909-0:2016 methodology with the following features:

  • Network modelling: Users define the network as a single-line diagram with utility source, transformers, cables, busbars, and motor loads. Each element's impedance is calculated per the IEC 60909 impedance correction rules.
  • All four fault types: The calculator computes I"k3, I"k2, I"k2E, and I"k1 at every user-defined fault location. Both maximum (cmax) and minimum (cmin) fault levels are calculated.
  • Motor contribution: Induction motors and synchronous motors are modelled per IEC 60909-0, Clauses 11 and 12. Users can specify which motors are VFD-fed (excluded from contribution) and which are direct-on-line.
  • Results table: Output includes I"k, ip, Ib, Ik, and Ith at each fault location, with comparison against installed equipment ratings.
  • Cable verification: The thermal equivalent current Ith is automatically checked against each cable's adiabatic withstand capacity per IEC 60364-4-43.
When IEC 60909 is not sufficient: For systems with significant inverter-based generation (solar PV >25% of fault level contribution, BESS, wind turbines with full converters), the IEC 60909 method may not adequately model the fault behaviour. In these cases, time-domain electromagnetic transient (EMT) simulation is recommended. ECalPro flags this condition when the calculated inverter-based contribution exceeds 25% of the total fault level.

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Frequently Asked Questions

No. IEC 60909-0 applies only to three-phase AC systems. DC short-circuit calculations are covered by IEC 61660 (Short-circuit currents in d.c. auxiliary installations in power plants and substations). The methodology is fundamentally different because DC systems do not have the AC impedance characteristics (reactance, frequency dependence) that IEC 60909 relies on.
The overestimation is intentional and comes from several conservative assumptions: all generators at maximum output, all motors contributing, no arc resistance at the fault, and a voltage factor c_max greater than 1.0. This conservatism ensures that equipment selected based on IEC 60909 results will always have adequate fault ratings. The degree of overestimation is typically 5-25% depending on the system type, with industrial LV systems (many motors) showing the largest overestimation.
These are completely different standards serving different purposes. IEC 60909 calculates short-circuit fault currents for equipment rating and protection coordination. IEC 60287 calculates the continuous current-carrying capacity (ampacity) of cables based on thermal analysis. They are both used in electrical design but address different aspects: IEC 60909 deals with seconds-duration fault events, while IEC 60287 deals with continuous steady-state loading.

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