Cable Ampacity
Cable ampacity is the maximum continuous current a conductor can carry without exceeding its insulation temperature rating under specified installation conditions. NEC Article 310.16 tabulates ampacity values for common conductor sizes, insulation types, and temperature ratings. Ampacity must be derated for ambient temperature, conductor grouping, and conduit fill per NEC Section 310.15.
Detailed Explanation
Ampacity — the ampere capacity of a conductor — represents the thermal limit of a cable under specific reference conditions. Every cable has a maximum continuous operating temperature determined by its insulation material: 70°C for PVC, 90°C for XLPE and EPR, and 105°C or higher for silicone and mineral insulation. When the conductor current produces I²R heating that would raise the conductor temperature to this limit, the cable is at its ampacity. Exceeding ampacity accelerates insulation aging, reducing the cable's service life from its design value of 30+ years. Tabulated ampacity values assume reference conditions (30°C ambient air, 20°C ground temperature, single circuit in free air or standard burial depth with 2.5 K·m/W soil). Real installations require adjustment factors for higher ambient temperatures, grouped cables with mutual heating, and conduit fill restrictions. The NEC uses the term ampacity while IEC and BS standards use current-carrying capacity (CCC) — the concept is identical. Engineers should always use the insulation's rated temperature for ampacity lookup but may need to use the terminal temperature rating (often 60°C or 75°C) for termination sizing.
Standard References
| Standard | Clause | Relevance |
|---|---|---|
| NEC/NFPA 70:2023 | Article 310.16 | Ampacity tables for insulated conductors by size, insulation, and temperature rating |
| IEC 60364-5-52 | Tables B.52.2–B.52.13 | Current-carrying capacity tables for different installation methods and cable types |
Related Terms
Cable Sizing
Cable sizing is the engineering process of selecting the minimum conductor cross-sectional area that safely carries the ...
Derating Factor
A derating factor is a multiplier less than one applied to a cable's tabulated current-carrying capacity to account for ...
Ambient Temperature Derating
Ambient temperature derating adjusts a cable's current-carrying capacity when the surrounding air or soil temperature di...
Cable Grouping Factor
The cable grouping factor is a derating multiplier applied when multiple loaded cables are installed in close proximity,...