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Short Circuit Calculator per IEC 60909-0 for Commercial Buildings

IEC 60909-02016 + AMD1:2020Commercial Buildings

Commercial building short circuit analysis per IEC 60909-0:2016 + AMD1:2020 focuses on low-voltage distribution from the main switchboard through sub-distribution boards. The voltage factor cmax = 1.10 (Table 1) is applied for maximum fault current to verify MCCB breaking capacity. Cable impedances per unit length and transformer short circuit voltage (Clause 4.3.2) dominate the equivalent impedance calculation.

Quick Reference Table

IEC 60909-0:2016 Key References for Commercial BuildingsIEC 60909-0 (2016 + AMD1:2020)
ParameterValue / RequirementClause Reference
Voltage Factor — Low Voltagecmax = 1.10, cmin = 0.95 for systems with Un ≤ 1 kVTable 1
Transformer ImpedanceImpedance correction factor KT applied to short circuit voltage ukrClause 4.3.2
Network Feeder ImpedanceUtility fault level at transformer primary determines upstream contributionClause 4.3.1
Cable ImpedancePer-unit-length R and X values reduce fault current at remote distribution boardsClause 4.3.1 (element impedances)
Single-Phase Fault CurrentLine-to-neutral fault for TN systems — governs MCCB single-pole breaking capacityClause 4.2 (asymmetrical faults)

How to Calculate Short Circuit for Commercial Buildings

  1. 1

    Obtain utility fault level at the building connection point

    Request the prospective short circuit current or fault level (MVA) from the electricity distributor. This determines the network feeder impedance per IEC 60909-0 Clause 4.3.1.

  2. 2

    Model the distribution transformer

    Enter the transformer rated power, primary/secondary voltages, and short circuit voltage (ukr%). Apply the impedance correction factor KT per Clause 4.3.2 to account for on-load tap changer position.

  3. 3

    Add cable impedances for each feeder run

    Input cable type, cross-section, and length for each feeder from the main switchboard to sub-distribution boards. The per-unit-length R and X values progressively reduce fault current at downstream boards.

  4. 4

    Calculate three-phase and single-phase fault currents

    Compute I"k3 (three-phase) for equipment breaking capacity verification and I"k1 (single-phase, line-to-neutral) for earth fault protection sensitivity checks in TN-S or TN-C-S systems.

  5. 5

    Verify MCCB and switchgear ratings

    Compare calculated maximum I"k with the rated breaking capacity (Icu or Ics) of every MCCB and switch-disconnector in the distribution system. Flag any equipment rated below the prospective fault current.

Try the Short Circuit Calculator

Run compliant IEC 60909-0 calculations for commercial buildings — free, instant results with full clause references.

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AC vs DC Fault Current Comparison

ParameterAC FaultDC Fault
Natural zero crossingYes (every half cycle)No natural zero crossing
Arc extinctionEasier (current passes through zero)Harder (sustained arc)
Calculation standardIEC 60909-0IEC 61660-1
Peak factor1.02–1.8 (depends on X/R ratio)1.0 (no AC component)
Protection challengeWell-established CB technologyRequires specialised DC breakers

Frequently Asked Questions

Request both the maximum prospective short circuit current (or fault level in MVA/kA) and the minimum earth fault current at the point of supply. The maximum value is needed for equipment rating verification with cmax per IEC 60909-0 Table 1. The minimum value helps verify that protective devices can detect and clear the lowest expected fault.
Each metre of cable adds impedance (R + jX per unit length) to the fault loop. In commercial buildings with long cable runs (50–200 m) from the main switchboard to remote distribution boards, the cable impedance can reduce the prospective fault current by 40–70% compared to the main switchboard value. This is beneficial for equipment ratings but must be checked against protection sensitivity requirements.
Per IEC 60909-0 Clause 4.5, motor contributions should be included when the aggregate motor rated current exceeds approximately 1% of the initial symmetrical short circuit current at the bus. In commercial buildings, large chiller motors (100–500 kW) connected directly to the main switchboard can add 5–15% to the fault current and should be included. Small distributed loads (fans, pumps under 10 kW) are usually negligible.

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