Arc Flash Calculator per IEEE 1584 for Utility Substations
Utility substation arc flash analysis per IEEE 1584-2018 addresses open-air and enclosed medium-voltage equipment from 4.16 kV to 15 kV. Open-air electrode configurations HOA and VOA (Table 1) apply to exposed bus in outdoor switchyards. Incident energy calculations per Clause 4.7 must reflect relay protection clearing times including breaker failure backup (Clause 4.9 variation check).
Quick Reference Table
| IEEE 1584-2018 Key References for Utility Substations — IEEE 1584 (2018) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Parameter | Value / Requirement | Clause Reference |
| Open-Air Electrode Configurations | HOA (horizontal open air) and VOA (vertical open air) for outdoor bus | Table 1 |
| Medium-Voltage Arcing Current | Model calibrated for 4.16 kV to 15 kV with high fault MVA sources | Clause 4.4 |
| Incident Energy at Extended Distance | Outdoor working distances may exceed 910 mm for transmission-class equipment | Clause 4.7 |
| Breaker Failure Clearing Time | Include backup protection time if primary relay or breaker fails to operate | Clause 4.9 |
| Arc Flash Boundary for Open Air | Boundary distances in open-air configurations are larger due to uncontained arc plasma | Table 8 |
How to Calculate Arc Flash for Utility Substations
- 1
Obtain substation fault current data
Retrieve three-phase bolted fault current at each bus from the utility short circuit study. For substations with multiple incoming feeders, use the maximum bus fault current with all sources in service.
- 2
Classify electrode configuration for each equipment
Assign HOA or VOA for outdoor bus and disconnect switches. Use VCB or VCBB for metal-clad switchgear line-ups. Refer to IEEE 1584-2018 Table 1 for geometry matching criteria.
- 3
Determine primary and backup clearing times
Input the primary relay clearing time plus breaker operating time. Also calculate the breaker failure scenario: primary clearing time plus breaker failure relay time plus backup breaker operating time.
- 4
Set working distance per utility operating procedures
Use 910 mm for medium-voltage metal-clad switchgear. For outdoor bus work, use the actual distance from live parts specified in the utility's safe work procedures, which may be 1.2 m or greater.
- 5
Generate dual-scenario labels
Produce arc flash labels showing both the normal clearing scenario and the breaker failure scenario. Utility personnel must know the worst-case PPE requirement when primary protection may not operate.
- 6
Map results to substation drawings
Overlay arc flash boundaries onto the substation plan drawing to define exclusion zones, approach limits, and PPE-required areas for switching and maintenance operations.
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Calculate Arc Flash NowIEEE 1584 vs NFPA 70E Comparison
| Parameter | IEEE 1584 | NFPA 70E |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Incident energy calculation method | Workplace electrical safety practices |
| Scope | Engineering analysis model | Safety program and procedures |
| Output | Incident energy (cal/cm²), arc flash boundary | PPE categories, approach boundaries |
| Analysis method | Detailed calculation (voltage, gap, config) | Table method or incident energy analysis |
| Voltage range | 208V–15kV (2018 model) | 50V and above |
| Update cycle | Revised periodically (2002, 2018) | Every 3 years (2021 current) |