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Worked Example: Hospital Essential Supply — Operating Theatre Distribution Board

Step-by-step submain cable sizing from MSB to an operating theatre distribution board feeding critical surgical equipment. Covers medical IT systems, earth fault loop impedance, equipotential bonding, and how AS/NZS 3009, BS 7671 Section 710, and IEC 60364-7-710 force different cable selections.

AS/NZS 300822 min readUpdated March 3, 2026
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Scenario

ParameterValue
Facility400-bed regional hospital, new operating theatre wing
Supply400/230 V three-phase four-wire, TN-S, 50 Hz
Load on operating theatre DB63 kVA (surgical lights, diathermy, monitors, anaesthetic equipment)
Load power factor0.90 lagging (mixed resistive and electronic)
Load classificationGroup 2 medical location (contact with patient’s heart or near the heart)
Cable route45 m from MSB to operating theatre DB
InstallationMulticore XLPE copper cable in dedicated conduit, vertical riser then ceiling void
Other circuits in conduitNone (dedicated conduit for theatre supply, per medical standard requirements)
Ambient temperature35°C (ceiling void above theatre)
Supply transformerMedical IT system (isolated supply) via 63 kVA isolation transformer
Insulation monitoringRequired per Group 2 medical location
RCD requirementNOT permitted on Group 2 circuits (loss of supply risk)

This example demonstrates how medical location standards impose additional constraints beyond normal cable sizing — particularly earth leakage monitoring, IT system isolation, and equipotential bonding requirements that fundamentally change the cable and protection selection.

Step 1: Calculate Design Current

The operating theatre DB is fed via a medical IT (isolated) supply transformer. The 63 kVA load at 0.90 PF:

Ib = S / (√3 × V) = 63,000 / (√3 × 400) — (Eq. 1)

Ib = 63,000 / 692.8

Ib = 90.9 A

However, the submain from MSB to the isolation transformer must also account for transformer magnetising current and losses. Using a 1.1 factor for transformer no-load current and copper losses:

Idesign = Ib × 1.1 = 90.9 × 1.1 = 100.0 A — (Eq. 2)

Protective device: 100 A MCCB (adjustable thermal-magnetic trip).

Step 2: Determine Derating Factors

Each standard applies different derating based on reference conditions.

AS/NZS 3008.1.1:2017

Ambient temperature correction (k1):

Reference ambient = 40°C. Actual = 35°C. From Table 22, Row 35°C, Column 90°C XLPE:

k1 = 1.02 (slight bonus)

Grouping correction (k2):

Dedicated conduit, single circuit. From Table 25, 1 circuit in conduit:

k2 = 1.00 (no grouping derating)

Installation method correction:

Enclosed in conduit, per AS/NZS 3008 Table 3, using Method B2 (conduit on wall in ceiling void):

ktotal = 1.02 × 1.00 = 1.02

Required tabulated ampacity:

Iz = 100.0 / 1.02 = 98.0 A — (Eq. 3a)

From AS/NZS 3008 Table 13, Column 10 (multicore in conduit, XLPE copper):

Cable SizeRating (A)Result
16 mm²85 AFAIL
25 mm²112 APASS (112 ≥ 98.0)

AS/NZS initial selection: 25 mm²

BS 7671:2018+A2

Ambient temperature correction (Ca):

Reference ambient = 30°C. Actual = 35°C. From Table C.1, Row 35°C, Column 90°C XLPE:

Ca = 0.96

Grouping correction (Cg):

Single circuit in dedicated conduit:

Cg = 1.00

Iz = 100.0 / (0.96 × 1.00) = 104.2 A — (Eq. 3b)

From BS 7671 Table 4D2A, Method B, XLPE multicore copper:

Cable SizeRating (A)Result
16 mm²89 AFAIL
25 mm²116 APASS (116 ≥ 104.2)

BS 7671 initial selection: 25 mm²

IEC 60364-5-52

Same methodology as BS 7671:

Iz = 100.0 / 0.96 = 104.2 A — (Eq. 3c)

From IEC 60364-5-52 Table B.52.2, Method B:

IEC initial selection: 25 mm²

Step 3: Medical Location Requirements — Where Standards Diverge

This is where the calculation departs from standard cable sizing. Medical location standards impose additional requirements that can force cable upsizing or entirely different protection philosophies.

AS/NZS 3009:2022 — Electrical Installations in Patient Areas

Group 2 medical locations (operating theatres, cardiac catheterisation labs, intensive care): AS/NZS 3009 Clause 5.4 requires:

1. Medical IT system (isolated supply): The operating theatre circuits must be supplied through a medical isolation transformer per Clause 5.4.2. Maximum rating: 10 kVA per single-phase unit or 63 kVA for three-phase.

2. Insulation monitoring device (IMD): Per Clause 5.4.3, a permanently installed IMD must continuously monitor the insulation resistance. The IMD must alarm when insulation resistance falls below 50 kΩ.

3. No RCDs on Group 2 circuits: Clause 5.4.4 explicitly prohibits RCDs on life-support equipment circuits because an RCD trip would disconnect power to the surgical equipment.

4. Supplementary equipotential bonding: Clause 5.5 requires supplementary equipotential bonding connecting all exposed and extraneous conductive parts within the patient environment. The resistance between any two simultaneously accessible conductive parts must not exceed 0.2 Ω (Clause 5.5.2).

5. Earth leakage limit on the submain: The submain cable must ensure fault clearance within 0.4 seconds for the submain protection device.

Impact on cable sizing:

The submain CPC must be at least 10 mm² copper (Clause 5.5.3) for a Group 2 medical location. For a 25 mm² phase conductor, the standard CPC would be 10 mm² — so this requirement is met.

BS 7671:2018+A2, Section 710 — Medical Locations

BS 7671 Section 710 applies to Group 1 and Group 2 medical locations. For Group 2:

1. Medical IT system: Regulation 710.411.6.3.1 requires a medical IT system. Transformer requirements per BS EN 61558-2-15 (maximum leakage current 0.5 mA).

2. Insulation monitoring: Regulation 710.411.6.3.2 requires an IMD conforming to IEC 61557-8.

3. No RCDs on Group 2 IT system circuits.

4. RCD requirement for non-IT circuits in Group 2: Regulation 710.411.6.3.2 requires 30 mA RCD with maximum disconnection time of 0.3 seconds for circuits NOT supplied by the medical IT system.

5. Earth fault loop impedance reduced: For Group 2 medical locations, the maximum disconnection time for final circuits is 0.2 seconds (Regulation 710.411.3.2.1), reduced from the normal 0.4 seconds.

Impact on cable sizing — the 0.2 second disconnection time:

For a 100 A MCCB to operate within 0.2 seconds, the fault current must be higher, requiring lower impedance.

Maximum earth fault loop impedance for 0.2 s disconnection:

For a 100 A Type C MCCB to trip within 0.2 seconds, the fault current must exceed approximately 10× rated current = 1,000 A.

Zs,max = U0 / If = 230 / 1,000 = 0.230 Ω — (Eq. 4)

Check actual loop impedance for 25 mm² phase / 10 mm² CPC, 45 m:

Zs = Ze + (R1 + R2) × L × 1.2 — (Eq. 5)

Where Ze = 0.35 Ω (typical TN-S supply), R1 = 0.889 mΩ/m (25 mm² at 20°C), R2 = 2.222 mΩ/m (10 mm² at 20°C), and the 1.2 factor corrects to operating temperature:

Zs = 0.35 + (0.889 + 2.222) × 0.045 × 1.2

Zs = 0.35 + 3.111 × 0.045 × 1.2

Zs = 0.35 + 0.168

Zs = 0.518 Ω

This EXCEEDS the 0.230 Ω maximum. The 25 mm² / 10 mm² combination FAILS the earth fault loop impedance check for BS 7671 Group 2 medical locations.

BS 7671 Solution — Earth Fault Loop Impedance

Option A: Increase CPC to 25 mm² (same as phase):

Zs = 0.35 + (0.889 + 0.889) × 0.045 × 1.2 = 0.35 + 0.096 = 0.446 Ω — Still FAILS.

Option B: Increase phase to 35 mm², CPC to 25 mm²:

Zs = 0.35 + (0.635 + 0.889) × 0.045 × 1.2 = 0.35 + 0.082 = 0.432 Ω — Still FAILS.

Option C: Increase phase to 50 mm², CPC to 25 mm²:

Zs = 0.35 + (0.444 + 0.889) × 0.045 × 1.2 = 0.35 + 0.072 = 0.422 Ω — Still FAILS.

The external earth fault loop impedance (Ze = 0.35 Ω) dominates. Even with infinitely large cables, Zs cannot fall below Ze = 0.35 Ω, which exceeds the 0.230 Ω limit.

The solution is to change the protection strategy. Per BS 7671 Regulation 710.411.6.3.2, the medical IT system provides the protection — the first fault does not cause disconnection, and the IMD provides warning. The earth fault loop impedance check applies only to the submain upstream of the isolation transformer (TN-S section), not to the IT system downstream.

Revised approach: Using a 100 A MCCB with 0.4 second disconnection time (submain is upstream of the patient area):

Zs,max = 230 / 500 = 0.460 Ω (for 100 A MCCB at 5×, 0.4 s)

Check: Zs = 0.518 Ω — Still FAILS (but closer).

Final solution: Upsize to 35 mm² phase / 16 mm² CPC:

R1 = 0.635 mΩ/m (35 mm²), R2 = 1.389 mΩ/m (16 mm²)

Zs = 0.35 + (0.635 + 1.389) × 0.045 × 1.2

Zs = 0.35 + 2.024 × 0.045 × 1.2

Zs = 0.35 + 0.109

Zs = 0.459 Ω — PASS (just barely, at 0.459 < 0.460)

BS 7671 final selection: 35 mm² phase / 16 mm² CPC

IEC 60364-7-710 — Medical Locations

IEC 60364-7-710 follows a similar approach to BS 7671 Section 710 with minor differences:

1. Medical IT system: Clause 710.411.6.3 — isolation transformer not exceeding 10 kVA per single-phase or 63 kVA three-phase.

2. Disconnection time for Group 2: Clause 710.411.3.2.1 requires 0.2 seconds for final circuits (same as BS 7671).

3. Supplementary equipotential bonding: Clause 710.415.2 requires resistance not exceeding 0.2 Ω.

4. Standby supply (essential supply): Clause 710.560 requires automatic changeover to standby supply within specific times: less than 0.5 seconds for life support and surgical lighting; less than 15 seconds for other Group 2 lighting and essential equipment.

IEC cable selection follows the same earth fault loop logic as BS 7671. Final selection: 35 mm² phase / 16 mm² CPC.

Step 4: Voltage Drop Verification

For the final cable selections at 45 m, carrying 100 A at PF 0.90:

AS/NZS: 25 mm²

From AS/NZS 3008 Table 35, 25 mm², XLPE three-phase:

r = 0.889 mΩ/m, x = 0.095 mΩ/m

ΔV = √3 × 100 × 45 × (0.889 × 0.90 + 0.095 × 0.436) / 1000 — (Eq. 6)

ΔV = 7,794 × (0.800 + 0.041) / 1000

ΔV = 7,794 × 0.841 / 1000

ΔV = 6.55 V = 1.64%. PASS (limit 5%).

BS 7671 / IEC: 35 mm²

From BS 7671 Table 4D2B, 35 mm²:

r = 0.635 mΩ/m, x = 0.090 mΩ/m

ΔV = 1.732 × 100 × 45 × (0.635 × 0.90 + 0.090 × 0.436) / 1000

ΔV = 7,794 × (0.572 + 0.039) / 1000

ΔV = 4.76 V = 1.19%. PASS (limit 5%).

Both are well within limits.

Step 5: Protection Coordination Summary

AspectAS/NZS 3009BS 7671 Sec. 710IEC 60364-7-710
Group 2 IT systemMandatory (Cl. 5.4.2)Mandatory (Reg. 710.411.6.3.1)Mandatory (Cl. 710.411.6.3)
Isolation transformer max63 kVA 3-phasePer BS EN 61558-2-1510 kVA 1-phase or 63 kVA 3-phase
Insulation monitoringIMD, alarm at 50 kΩIMD per IEC 61557-8, 50 kΩIMD per IEC 61557-8, 50 kΩ
RCD on Group 2 IT circuitsProhibited (Cl. 5.4.4)Prohibited (Reg. 710.411.6.3.1)Prohibited (Cl. 710.411.6.3)
RCD on non-IT Group 2 circuits30 mA (Cl. 5.4.5)30 mA, 0.3 s (Reg. 710.411.6.3.2)30 mA (Cl. 710.411.6.3.2)
Disconnection time0.4 s (standard)0.2 s (Group 2 final circuits)0.2 s (Group 2 final circuits)
Supplementary bonding0.2 Ω max (Cl. 5.5.2)0.2 Ω max (Reg. 710.415.2)0.2 Ω max (Cl. 710.415.2)
Minimum CPC10 mm² Cu (Cl. 5.5.3)Per Table 54.7, min 10 mm²Per calculation + local annex
Standby supply changeoverNot specified in 3009Not specified in 710< 0.5 s for life support (Cl. 710.560)

Result Summary

ParameterAS/NZS 3009BS 7671 Sec. 710IEC 60364-7-710
Design current100 A100 A100 A
Protective device100 A MCCB100 A MCCB100 A MCCB
Phase cable25 mm²35 mm²35 mm²
CPC10 mm² (min per Cl. 5.5.3)16 mm² (Zs requirement)16 mm² (Zs requirement)
Voltage drop1.64%1.19%1.19%
Earth fault loop Zs0.518 Ω0.459 Ω0.459 Ω
Governing factorCurrent capacityEarth fault loop impedanceEarth fault loop impedance
Copper weight (45 m)25 mm² × 4 + 10 mm² CPC35 mm² × 4 + 16 mm² CPC35 mm² × 4 + 16 mm² CPC

Multi-Standard Comparison

AspectAS/NZS 3009BS 7671 Sec. 710IEC 60364-7-710
Reference ambient40°C30°C30°C
Current capacity cable25 mm²25 mm²25 mm²
Medical requirement cable25 mm² (no change)35 mm² (upsized)35 mm² (upsized)
Cable upsize factor1.0×1.4×1.4×
Reason for upsizeNone needed0.2 s disconnection time0.2 s disconnection time
CPC size10 mm²16 mm²16 mm²
CPC upsize factor1.0× (minimum met)1.6×1.6×
IT system isolationYesYesYes
Total copper index1.001.481.48

Key Insight

The key finding in this example is that the medical location standard’s reduced disconnection time (0.2 seconds under BS 7671 and IEC, versus 0.4 seconds under standard installations) forces a cable upsize that has nothing to do with current capacity or voltage drop. The 25 mm² cable that is perfectly adequate for carrying 100 A cannot achieve a sufficiently low earth fault loop impedance to ensure the MCCB trips within 0.2 seconds during a fault.

This creates the counterintuitive result: under BS 7671 and IEC, the cable for an operating theatre must be 40% larger than the cable for an identical load in a commercial office — not because the operating theatre draws more current, but because a patient with electrodes connected to their heart can be killed by a fault current as low as 10 microamps. The 0.2-second disconnection time, the prohibition of RCDs on IT system circuits, and the requirement for insulation monitoring all serve to ensure that the first fault in a Group 2 medical location does not cause either (a) a dangerous touch voltage on exposed metalwork or (b) a loss of supply to life-critical equipment.

AS/NZS 3009 avoids this specific cable upsize because it does not mandate the reduced 0.2-second disconnection time for the submain upstream of the isolation transformer. Instead, it relies on the IT system itself to provide the safety function on the downstream side: a first fault in the IT system does not cause any disconnection at all, and the IMD alarm allows the surgical team to complete the procedure before the fault is investigated. This is arguably a more elegant solution — it separates the protection philosophy (IT system with IMD) from the cable sizing (which can follow standard rules) — but it requires rigorous maintenance of the insulation monitoring system.

The deeper engineering lesson is that hospital electrical design is fundamentally different from commercial or industrial design. In an operating theatre, a 200-millisecond power interruption can cause a patient’s heart to fibrillate, and a 50 V touch voltage on a conductive surface in contact with the patient’s body can be lethal. The extra copper in the cable is the cheapest form of patient safety insurance.

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Frequently Asked Questions

An RCD (residual current device) disconnects the circuit when it detects earth leakage current exceeding its rated threshold (typically 30 mA). In a normal installation, this is a critical safety feature. But in a Group 2 medical location — an operating theatre with a patient connected to monitoring equipment, anaesthetic machines, and surgical instruments — a sudden loss of power can be immediately life-threatening. If an RCD trips during surgery due to a minor insulation fault, the surgical lights go out, the electrosurgical unit stops cauterising a bleeding vessel, and the patient monitoring goes dark. The medical IT system solves this by using an isolation transformer: because the secondary is isolated from earth, a single earth fault does not create a fault current path and therefore does not cause any protective device to trip. The insulation monitoring device raises an alarm so the fault can be investigated after the procedure is complete.
In a Group 2 medical location, all simultaneously accessible conductive surfaces — metal bed frames, instrument trolleys, wall-mounted equipment rails, gas outlet panels, lighting booms, floor conductive surfaces — must be connected by supplementary equipotential bonding conductors so that the resistance between any two accessible points does not exceed 0.2 ohm. This ensures that even if a fault causes a potential difference between two surfaces, the maximum touch voltage across the patient’s body is limited to a safe level. For cardiac procedures, the threshold for ventricular fibrillation via direct cardiac contact can be as low as 10-50 microamps. The 0.2 ohm bonding ensures that any circulating fault current through the patient’s body is kept below this threshold. The bonding conductors must be at least 4 mm² copper (AS/NZS 3009) or 2.5 mm² copper (BS 7671) and must be identified by green-yellow insulation.
Yes, and it would be good practice. While AS/NZS 3009 Clause 5.5.3 specifies a minimum CPC size of 10 mm² for Group 2 medical locations, there is no prohibition on using a larger CPC. A 16 mm² CPC with a 25 mm² phase conductor provides lower earth fault loop impedance and faster fault clearance, improving safety margins. The additional cost of 16 mm² versus 10 mm² CPC over a 45 m run is approximately $15-20 in copper — trivial in the context of a hospital construction budget. Many Australian hospital designers voluntarily use BS 7671-equivalent CPC sizing for the additional safety margin, even though AS/NZS 3009 does not require it.

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