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Wikipedia

Surge protector

A surge protector (or spike suppressor, surge suppressor, surge diverter,[1] surge protection device (SPD) or transient voltage surge suppressor (TVSS) is an appliance or device intended to protect electrical devices from voltage spikes in alternating current (AC) circuits. A voltage spike is a transient event, typically lasting 1 to 30 microseconds, that may reach over 1,000 volts. Lightning that hits a power line can give a spike of over 100,000 volts and can burn through wiring insulation and cause fires, but even modest spikes can destroy a wide variety of electronic devices, computers, battery chargers, modems and TVs etc, that happen to be plugged in at the time. Typically the surge device will trigger at a set voltage, around 3 to 4 times the mains voltage, and divert the current to earth. Some devices may absorb the spike and release it as heat. They are generally rated according to the amount of energy in joules they can absorb.

Surge Protection Device SPD for installation in a low-voltage distribution board.

Voltage spikes

In an AC circuit a voltage spike is a transient event, typically lasting 1 to 30 microseconds, that may reach over 1,000 volts. Lightning that hits a power line can give many thousands, sometimes 100,000 or more volts. A motor when switched off can generate a spike of 1,000 or more volts. Spikes can degrade wiring insulation and destroy electronic devices like light bulbs, battery chargers, modems, TVs, and other consumer electronics.

Spikes can also occur on telephone and data lines when AC main lines accidentally connect to them or lightning hits them, or if the telephone and data lines travel near lines with a spike and the voltage is induced.

A long term surge, lasting seconds, minutes, or hours, caused by power transformer failures such as a lost neutral or other power company error, are not protected by transient protectors. Long term surges can destroy the protectors in an entire building or area. Even tens of milliseconds can be longer than a protector can handle. Long term surges may or may not be handled by fuses and overvoltage relays.

Surge currents

Surge currents are much lower in Category A locations than at Category B and C locations.

Category A loads are more than 60 feet of wire length from the service entrance to the load. Category A loads can be exposed to 6kV, 0.5kA surge currents.

Category B loads are more than 30 feet from the service entrance and less than 60 feet of wire length from the service entrance to the load. Category B loads can be exposed to 6kV, 3kA surge currents.

Category C loads are less than 30 feet from the service entrance to the load. Category C loads can be exposed to 20kV, 10kA surge currents.[2]

A building's wiring adds impedance that limits the surge current that reaches the loads. There is less surge current at longer wire distances and where more impedance is present between the service entrance and the load.[3]

A coiled extension cord can be used to increase the wire length to more than 60 feet and to increase the impedance between the service entrance and the load.[4]

Definitions

The terms surge protection device (SPD) and transient voltage surge suppressor (TVSS) are used to describe electrical devices typically installed in power distribution panels, process control systems, communications systems, and other heavy-duty industrial systems, for the purpose of protecting against electrical surges and spikes, including those caused by lightning. Scaled-down versions of these devices are sometimes installed in residential service entrance electrical panels, to protect equipment in a household from similar hazards.[5]

Protectors

A transient surge protector attempts to limit the voltage supplied to an electric device by either blocking or shorting current to reduce the voltage below a safe threshold. Blocking is done by using inductors which inhibit a sudden change in current. Shorting is done by spark gaps, discharge tubes, zener-type semiconductors, and metal-oxide varistors (MOVs), all of which begin to conduct current once a certain voltage threshold is reached, or by capacitors which inhibit a sudden change in voltage. Some surge protectors use multiple elements.

The most common and effective way is the shorting method in which the electrical lines are temporarily shorted together (as by a spark gap) or clamped to a target voltage (as by a MOV) resulting in a large current flow. The voltage is reduced as the shorting current flows through the resistance in the power lines. The spike's energy is dissipated in the power lines (and/or the ground), or in the body of the MOV, converted to heat. Since a spike lasts only 10s of microseconds, the temperature rise is minimal. However, if the spike is large enough or long enough, like a nearby hit by lightning, there might not be enough power line or ground resistance and the MOV (or other protection element) can be destroyed and power lines melted.

Surge protectors for homes can be in power strips used inside, or a device outside at the power panel. Sockets in a modern house uses three wires: line, neutral and ground. Many protectors will connect to all three in pairs (line–neutral, line–ground and neutral–ground), because there are conditions, such as lightning, where both line and neutral have high voltage spikes that need to be shorted to ground.

 
A power strip with built-in surge protector and multiple outlets

Additionally, some consumer-grade protectors have ports for Ethernet and coaxial cables, and plugging them in allows the surge protector to shield them from external electrical damage.[6]

Transient voltage suppressor

A transient voltage suppressor or TVS is a general classification of electronic components that are designed to react to sudden or momentary overvoltage conditions. One such common device used for this purpose is known as the transient voltage suppression diode, a Zener diode designed to protect electronics device against overvoltages. Another design alternative applies a family of products that are known as metal-oxide varistors (MOV).[7]

The characteristic of a TVS requires that it respond to overvoltages faster than other common overvoltage protection components such as varistors or gas discharge tubes. This makes TVS devices or components useful for protection against very fast and often damaging voltage spikes. These fast overvoltage spikes are present on all distribution networks and can be caused by either internal or external events, such as lightning or motor arcing.[8]

Applications of transient voltage suppression diodes are used for unidirectional or bidirectional electrostatic discharge protection of transmission or data lines in electronic circuits. MOV-based TVSs are used to protect home electronics, distribution systems and may accommodate industrial level power distribution disturbances saving downtime and damage to equipment. The level of energy in a transient overvoltage can be equated to energy measured in joules or related to electric current when devices are rated for various applications. These bursts of overvoltage can be measured with specialized electronic meters that can show power disturbances of thousands of volts amplitude that last for a few microseconds or less.

It is possible for a MOV to overheat when exposed to overvoltage sufficient for the MOV to start conducting, but not enough to totally destroy it, or to blow a house fuse. If the overvoltage condition persists long enough to cause significant heating of the MOV, it can result in thermal damage to the device and start a fire.[9][10]

Comparison of transient suppressors

Type Surge capability (typical) Lifetime - number of surges Response time Shunt capacitance Leakage current (approximate)
TVS diode 1 A (small surface-mount device) to 15 kA (large through-hole device) ? ≈ 1 ps (limited by pin lengths) < 1 pF (small surface-mount device) to > 10 nF (large through-hole device) 1 μA
Metal-oxide varistor (MOV) Up to 70 kA @ 100 A, 8x20 μs pulse shape: 1,000 surges ≈ 1 ns Typically 100–1,000 pF +++ 10 μA
Avalanche diode, Zener diode 50 A @ 50 A, 8x20 μs pulse shape: infinite < 1 μs 50 pF 10 μA
Gas discharge tube > 20 kA @ 20 kA, 8x20 μs pulse width: > 20 surges < 5 μs < 1 pF < 1 nA

Domestic use

 
A surge protection device mounted on a residential circuit breaker panel

Many power strips have basic surge protection built in; these are typically clearly labeled as such. However, in unregulated countries there are power strips labelled as "surge" or "spike" protectors that only have a capacitor or RFI circuit (or nothing) that do not provide true (or any) spike protection.

Industrial use

 
Surge arresters
 
Large surge arrester

A surge arrester, surge protection device (SPD) or transient voltage surge suppressor (TVSS), is used to protect equipment in power transmission and distribution systems. The energy criterion for various insulation material can be compared by impulse ratio. A surge arrester should have a low impulse ratio, so that a surge incident on the surge arrester may be bypassed to the ground instead of passing through the apparatus.

To protect a unit of equipment from transients occurring on an attached conductor, a surge arrester is connected to the conductor just before it enters the equipment. The surge arrester is also connected to ground and functions by routing energy from an over-voltage transient to ground if one occurs, while isolating the conductor from ground at normal operating voltages. This is usually achieved through use of a varistor, which has substantially different resistances at different voltages.

Surge arresters are not generally designed to protect against a direct lightning strike to a conductor, but rather against electrical transients resulting from lightning strikes occurring in the vicinity of the conductor[citation needed]. Lightning which strikes the earth results in ground currents which can pass over buried conductors and induce a transient that propagates outward towards the ends of the conductor. The same kind of induction happens in overhead and above ground conductors which experience the passing energy of an atmospheric EMP caused by the lightning flash. Surge arresters only protect against induced transients characteristic of a lightning discharge's rapid rise-time and will not protect against electrification caused by a direct strike to the conductor. Transients similar to lightning-induced, such as from a high voltage system's fault switching, may also be safely diverted to ground; however, continuous overcurrents are not protected against by these devices. The energy in a handled transient is substantially less than that of a lightning discharge; however it is still of sufficient quantity to cause equipment damage and often requires protection.

Without very thick insulation, which is generally cost prohibitive, most conductors running more than minimal distances (greater than approximately 50 feet) will experience lightning-induced transients at some time during use. Because the transient is usually initiated at some point between the two ends of the conductor, most applications install a surge arrester just before the conductor lands in each piece of equipment to be protected. Each conductor must be protected, as each will have its own transient induced, and each SPD must provide a pathway to earth to safely divert the transient away from the protected component. The one notable exception where they are not installed at both ends is in high voltage distribution systems. In general, the induced voltage is not sufficient to do damage at the electric generation end of the lines; however, installation at the service entrance to a building is key to protecting downstream products that are not as robust.

Types

  • Low-voltage surge arrester: Apply in Low-voltage distribution system, exchange of electrical appliances protector, low-voltage distribution transformer windings
  • Distribution arrester: Apply in 3 kV, 6 kV, 10 kV AC power distribution system to protect distribution transformers, cables and power station equipment
  • The station type of common valve arrester: Used to protect the 3 ~ 220 kV transformer station equipment and communication system
  • Magnetic blow valve station arrester: Use to 35 ~ 500 kV protect communication systems, transformers and other equipment
  • Protection of rotating machine using magnetic blow valve arrester: Used to protect the AC generator and motor insulation
  • Line Magnetic blow valve arrester: Used to protect 330 kV and above communication system circuit equipment insulation
  • DC or blowing valve-type arrester: Use to protect the DC system’s insulation of electrical equipment
  • Neutral protection arrester: Apply in motor or the transformer’s neutral protection
  • Fiber-tube arrester: Apply in the power station’s wires and the weaknesses protection in the insulated
  • Plug-in Signal Arrester: Used to twisted-pair transmission line in order to protect communications and computer systems
     
    A Gas Tube Arrester commonly used in the sockets of Coaxial cables
  • High-frequency feeder arrester: Used to protect the microwave, mobile base stations satellite receiver, etc.
  • Receptacle-type surge arrester: Use to Protect the terminal Electronic equipment
  • Signal Arrester: Apply in MODEM, DDN line, fax, phone, process control signal circuit etc.
  • Network arrester: Apply in servers, workstations, interfaces etc.
  • Coaxial cable lightning arrester: Used on the coaxial cable to protect the wireless transmission and receiving system

Important specifications

These are some of the most prominently featured specifications which define a surge protector for AC mains, as well as for some data communications protection applications.

 
UK type G socket adapter with surge protector

Clamping voltage

Also known as the let-through voltage, this specifies what spike voltage will cause the protective components inside a surge protector to short or clamp.[11] A lower clamping voltage indicates better protection, but can sometimes result in a shorter life expectancy for the overall protective system. The lowest three levels of protection defined in the UL rating are 330 V, 400 V and 500 V. The standard let-through voltage for 120 V AC devices is 330 volts.[12]

Underwriters Laboratories (UL),[13] a global independent safety science company, defines how a protector may be used safely. UL 1449 became compliance mandatory in jurisdictions that adopted the NEC with the 3rd edition in September 2009 to increase safety compared to products conforming to the 2nd edition. A measured limiting voltage test, using six times higher current (and energy), defines a voltage protection rating (VPR). For a specific protector, this voltage may be higher compared to a Suppressed Voltage Ratings (SVR) in previous editions that measured let-through voltage with less current. Due to non-linear characteristics of protectors, let-through voltages defined by 2nd edition and 3rd edition testing are not comparable.[12][14]

A protector may be larger to obtain a same let-through voltage during 3rd edition testing. Therefore, a 3rd edition or later protector should provide superior safety with increased life expectancy.

A protector with a higher let-through voltage, e.g.400 V vs 330 V, will pass a higher voltage to the connected device. The design of the connected device determines whether this pass-through spike will cause damage. Motors and mechanical devices are usually not affected. Some (especially older) electronic parts, like chargers, LED or CFL bulbs and computerized appliances are sensitive and can be compromised and have their life reduced.

Joule rating

The Joule rating number defines how much energy a MOV-based surge protector can theoretically absorb in a single event, without failure. Better protectors exceed ratings of 1,000 joules and 40,000 amperes. Since the actual duration of a spike is only about 10 microseconds[citation needed], the actual dissipated energy is low. Any more than that and the MOV will fuse, or sometimes short and melt, hopefully blowing a fuse, disconnecting itself from the circuit.

The MOV (or other shorting device) requires resistance in the supply line in order to limit the voltage. For large, low resistance power lines a higher joule rated MOV is required. Inside a house, with smaller wires that have more resistance, a smaller MOV is acceptable.

Every time a MOV shorts, its internal structure is changed and its threshold voltage reduced slightly. After many spikes the threshold voltage can reduce enough to be near the line voltage, i.e. 120 vac or 240 vac. At this point the MOV will partially conduct and heat up and eventually fail, sometimes in a dramatic meltdown or even a fire. Most modern surge protectors have circuit breakers and temperature fuses to prevent serious consequences. Many also have an LED light to indicate if the MOVs are still functioning.

The joule rating is commonly quoted for comparing MOV-based surge protectors. An average surge (spike) is of short duration, lasting for nanoseconds to microseconds, and experimentally modeled surge energy can be less than 100 joules.[15] Well-designed surge protectors consider the resistance of the lines that supply the power, the chance of lightning or other seriously energetic spike, and specify the MOVs accordingly. A little battery charger might include a MOV of only 1 watt, whereas a surge strip will have a 20 watt MOV or several of them in parallel. A house protector will have a large block-type MOV.

Some manufacturers commonly design higher joule-rated surge protectors by connecting multiple MOVs in parallel and this can produce a misleading rating. Since individual MOVs have slightly different voltage thresholds and non-linear responses when exposed to the same voltage curve, any given MOV might be more sensitive than others. This can cause one MOV in a group to conduct more (a phenomenon called current hogging), leading to possible overuse and eventual premature failure of that component. However the other MOVs in the group do help a little as they start to conduct as the voltage continues to rise as it does since a MOV does not have a sharp threshold. It may start to short at 270 volts but not reach full short until 450 or more volts. A second MOV might start at 290 volts and another at 320 volts so they all can help clamp the voltage, and at full current there is a series ballast effect that improves current sharing, but stating the actual joule rating as the sum of all the individual MOVs does not accurately reflect the total clamping ability. The first MOV may bear more of the burden and fail earlier. One MOV manufacturer recommends using fewer but bigger MOVs (e.g.60 mm vs 40 mm diameter) if they can fit in the device and to match them and derate them. In some cases it may take four 40 mm MOVs to be equivalent to one 60 mm MOV.[16]

A further problem is that if a single inline fuse is placed in series with a group of paralleled MOVs as a disconnect safety feature, it will open and disconnect all remaining working MOVs.

The effective surge energy absorption capacity of the entire system is dependent on the MOV matching so derating by 20% or more is usually required. This limitation can be managed by using carefully matched sets of MOVs, matched according to manufacturer's specification.[17][16]

According to industry testing standards, based on IEEE and ANSI assumptions, power line surges inside a building can be up to 6,000 volts and 3,000 amperes, and deliver up to 90 joules of energy, including surges from external sources not including lightning strikes.

The common assumptions regarding lightning specifically, based ANSI/IEEE C62.41 and UL 1449 (3rd Edition) at time of this writing, are that minimum lightning-based power line surges inside a building are typically 10,000 amperes or 10 kiloamperes (kA). This is based on 20 kA striking a power line, the imparted current then traveling equally in both directions on the power line with the resulting 10 kA traveling into the building or home. These assumptions are based on an average approximation for testing minimum standards. While 10 kA is typically good enough for minimum protection against lightning strikes it is possible for a lightning strike to impart up to 200 kA to a power line with 100 kA traveling in each direction.

Lightning and other high-energy transient voltage surges can be suppressed with pole mounted suppressors by the utility, or with an owner supplied whole house surge protector. A whole house product is more expensive than simple single-outlet surge protectors and often needs professional installation on the incoming electrical power feed; however, they prevent power line spikes from entering the house. Damage from direct lightning strikes via other paths must be controlled separately.

Response time

Surge protectors don't operate instantaneously; a slight delay exists, some few nanoseconds. With longer response time and depending on system impedance, the connected equipment may be exposed to some of the surge. However, surges typically are much slower and take around a few microseconds to reach their peak voltage, and a surge protector with a nanosecond response time would kick in fast enough to suppress the most damaging portion of the spike.[18]

Thus response time under standard testing is not a useful measure of a surge protector's ability when comparing MOV devices. All MOVs have response times measured in nanoseconds, while test waveforms usually used to design and calibrate surge protectors are all based on modeled waveforms of surges measured in microseconds. As a result, MOV-based protectors have no trouble producing impressive response-time specs.

Slower-responding technologies (notably, GDTs) may have difficulty protecting against fast spikes. Therefore, good designs incorporating slower but otherwise useful technologies usually combine them with faster-acting components, to provide more comprehensive protection.[19]

 
A two-pole surge protector for installation in distribution boards

Standards

Some frequently listed standards include:

  • IEC 61643-11 Low-voltage surge protective devices - Part 11: Surge protective devices connected to low-voltage power systems - Requirements and test methods (replaces IEC 61643-1)
  • IEC 61643-21 Low voltage surge protective devices - Part 21: Surge protective devices connected to telecommunications and signalling networks - Performance requirements and testing methods
  • IEC 61643-22 Low-voltage surge protective devices - Part 22: Surge protective devices connected to telecommunications and signalling networks - Selection and application principles
  • EN 61643-11, 61643-21 and 61643-22
  • Telcordia Technologies Technical Reference TR-NWT-001011
  • ANSI/IEEE C62.xx
  • Underwriters Laboratories (UL) 1449.
  • AS/NZS 1768

Each standard defines different protector characteristics, test vectors, or operational purpose.

The 3rd Edition of UL Standard 1449 for SPDs was a major rewrite of previous editions, and was also accepted as an ANSI standard for the first time.[20][21] A subsequent revision in 2015 included the addition of low-voltage circuits for USB charging ports and associated batteries.[22][23]

EN 62305 and ANSI/IEEE C62.xx define what spikes a protector might be expected to divert. EN 61643-11 and 61643-21 specify both the product's performance and safety requirements. In contrast, the IEC only writes standards and does not certify any particular product as meeting those standards. IEC Standards are used by members of the CB Scheme of international agreements to test and certify products for safety compliance.

None of those standards guarantee that a protector will provide proper protection in a given application. Each standard defines what a protector should do or might accomplish, based on standardized tests that may or may not correlate to conditions present in a particular real-world situation. A specialized engineering analysis may be needed to provide sufficient protection, especially in situations of high lightning risk.

In addition, the following standards are not standards for standalone surge protectors, but are instead meant for testing surge immunity in electrical and electronic equipment as a whole. Thus, they're frequently used in the design and test of surge protection circuitry.

Primary components

Systems used to reduce or limit high-voltage surges[24][25] can include one or more of the following types of electronic components. Some surge suppression systems use multiple technologies, since each method has its strong and weak points.[19][26][27] The first six methods listed operate primarily by diverting unwanted surge energy away from the protected load, through a protective component connected in a parallel (or shunted) topology. The last two methods also block unwanted energy by using a protective component connected in series with the power feed to the protected load, and additionally may shunt the unwanted energy like the earlier systems.

 
Single-outlet surge protector, with visible connection and protection lights

Metal oxide varistor

A metal oxide varistor (MOV) consists of a bulk semiconductor material (typically sintered granular zinc oxide) that can conduct large currents when presented with a voltage above its rated voltage.[12][28] MOVs typically limit voltages to about 3 to 4 times the normal circuit voltage by diverting surge current elsewhere than the protected load. MOVs may be connected in parallel to increase current capability and life expectancy, providing they are matched sets.[a]

MOVs have finite life expectancy and degrade when exposed to a few large transients, or many small transients.[29][30] Every time an MOV activates its threshold voltage reduces slightly. After many spikes the threshold voltage can reduce enough to be near the protection voltage, either mains or data. At this point the MOV conducts more and more often, heats up and finally fails. In data circuits, the data channel becomes shorted and non-functional. In a power circuit, you may get a dramatic meltdown or even a fire if not protected by a fuse of some kind.[31]

Modern surge strips and house protectors have circuit breakers and temperature fuses to prevent serious consequences. A thermal fuse disconnects the MOV when it gets too hot. Only the MOV is disconnected leaving the rest of the circuit working but without surge protection. Often there is an LED light to indicate if the MOVs are still functioning. Older surge strips had no thermal fuse and relied on a 10 or 15 amp circuit breaker which usually blew only after the MOVs had smoked, burned, popped, melted and permanently shorted.

A failing MOV is a fire risk, which is a reason for the National Fire Protection Association's (NFPA)[32] UL1449 in 1986[33] and subsequent revisions in 1998, 2009 and 2015. NFPA's primary concern is protection from fire.[12][34]

Therefore, all MOV-based protectors intended for long-term use should have an indicator that the protective components have failed, and this indication must be checked on a regular basis to ensure that protection is still functioning.[35]

Because of their good price–performance ratio, MOVs are the most common protector component in low-cost basic AC power protectors.

Transient voltage suppression diode

A transient-voltage-suppression diode (TVS diode) is a type of avalanche diode which can limit voltage spikes. These components provide the fastest limiting action of protective components (theoretically in picoseconds), but have a relatively low energy-absorbing capability. Voltages can be clamped to less than twice the normal operation voltage. If current impulses remain within the device ratings, life expectancy is exceptionally long.[clarification needed] If component ratings are exceeded, the diode may fail as a permanent short circuit; in such cases, protection may remain but normal circuit operation is terminated in the case of low-power signal lines. Due to their relatively limited current capacity, TVS diodes are often restricted to circuits with smaller current spikes. TVS diodes are also used where spikes occur significantly more often than once a year, since this component will not degrade when used within its ratings. A unique type of TVS diode (trade names Transzorb or Transil) contains reversed paired series avalanche diodes for bi-polar operation.

TVS diodes are often used in high-speed but low-power circuits, such as occur in data communications. These devices can be paired in series with another diode to provide low capacitance[36] as required in communication circuits.

Thyristor surge protection device (TSPD)

A Trisil is a type of thyristor surge protection device (TSPD), a specialized solid-state electronic device used in crowbar circuits to protect against overvoltage conditions. A SIDACtor is another thyristor type device used for similar protective purposes.

These thyristor-family devices can be viewed as having characteristics much like a spark gap or a GDT, but can operate much faster. They are related to TVS diodes, but can "break over" to a low clamping voltage analogous to an ionized and conducting spark gap. After triggering, the low clamping voltage allows large current surges while limiting heat dissipation in the device.

Gas discharge tube (GDT) spark gap

 
Typical low-power lightning protection circuit. Note MOVs (blue disks) and GDTs (small silver cylinders).

A gas discharge tube (GDT) is a sealed glass-enclosed device containing a special gas mixture trapped between two electrodes, which conducts electric current after becoming ionized by a high voltage spike.[37] GDTs can conduct more current for their size than other components. Like MOVs, GDTs have a finite life expectancy, and can handle a few very large transients or a greater number of smaller transients. The typical failure mode occurs when the triggering voltage rises so high that the device becomes ineffective, although lightning surges can occasionally cause a dead short.

GDTs take a relatively long time to trigger (longer than a lightning strike of 60 ns to 70 ns),[38] permitting a higher voltage spike to pass through before the GDT conducts significant current. It is not uncommon for a GDT to let through pulses of 500 V or more of 100 ns in duration. In some cases, additional protective components are necessary to prevent damage to a protected load, caused by high-speed let-through voltage which occurs before the GDT begins to operate. The triggering voltages are typically 400–600 volts for gas tubes and those that are UL Standard 497 listed typically have high surge current ratings, 5,000 to 10,000 amperes (8x20 µs).[39]

GDTs create an effective short circuit when triggered, so that if any electrical energy (spike, signal, or power) is present, the GDT will short this. Once triggered, a GDT will continue conducting (called follow-on current) until all electric current sufficiently diminishes, and the gas discharge quenches. Unlike other shunt protector devices, a GDT once triggered will continue to conduct at a voltage less than the high voltage that initially ionized the gas; this behavior is called negative resistance. Additional auxiliary circuitry may be needed in DC (and some AC) applications to suppress follow-on current, to prevent it from destroying the GDT after the initiating spike has dissipated. Some GDTs are designed to deliberately short out to a grounded terminal when overheated, thereby triggering an external fuse or circuit breaker.[40]

Many GDTs are light-sensitive, in that exposure to light lowers their triggering voltage. Therefore, GDTs should be shielded from light exposure, or opaque versions that are insensitive to light should be used.

The CG2 SN series of surge arrestors, formerly produced by C P Clare, are advertised as being non-radioactive, and the datasheet for that series states that some members of the CG/CG2 series (75-470V) are radioactive.[41]

Due to their exceptionally low capacitance, GDTs are commonly used on high frequency lines, such as those used in telecommunications equipment. Because of their high current-handling capability, GDTs can also be used to protect power lines, but the follow-on current problem must be controlled.

Selenium voltage suppressor

An "overvoltage clamping" bulk semiconductor similar to an MOV, though it does not clamp as well. However, it usually has a longer life than an MOV. It is used mostly in high-energy DC circuits, like the exciter field of an alternator. It can dissipate power continuously, and it retains its clamping characteristics throughout the surge event, if properly sized.

Carbon block spark gap overvoltage suppressor

 
A telephone network interface device with spark-gap overvoltage suppressors. The two brass hex-head objects on the left cover the suppressors, which act to short overvoltage on the tip or ring lines to ground.

A spark gap is one of the oldest protective electrical technologies still found in telephone circuits, having been developed in the nineteenth century. A carbon rod electrode is held with an insulator at a specific distance from a second electrode. The gap dimension determines the voltage at which a spark will jump between the two parts and short to ground. The typical spacing for telephone applications in North America is 0.076 mm (0.003 inches).[42] Carbon block suppressors are similar to gas arrestors (GDTs) but with the two electrodes exposed to the air, so their behavior is affected by the surrounding atmosphere, especially the humidity. Since their operation produces an open spark, these devices should never be installed where an explosive atmosphere may develop.

Inductors, line reactors, chokes, capacitors

Inductors, Line Reactors, Chokes and Capacitors are used to limit fault currents and can reduce or prevent overvoltage events.[43] In applications that limit fault currents, inductors are more commonly known as an electrical line reactors or a choke. Line reactors can prevent overvoltage trips, increase the reliability and life of solid state devices, and reduce nuisance trips.[44][45][46]

Marshalling cabinet panels with surge protectors

Metal marshalling cabinet panels can allow surge protection device (SPD) failures to be contained remotely from digital devices and electrical controllers. Direct flashes of lightning and lightning surge on secondary systems can cause catastrophic failures of SPDs. Catastrophic failures of SPDs can release fireballs of metal fragments and clouds of conductive carbon soot. Marshalling panels keep such hazards from reaching the digital and control devices that are mounted in the remote main control panels.[47][48][49] Marshalling cabinet panels are used for digital system panels (fire alarm, security access control, computer clean power, etc.). Wiring and cables to be protected include both the power supply and any wiring (signaling circuit, initiating device circuit, shields, etc.), which extend beyond the building by underground, overhead or other means, such as walkways, bridges, etc. In addition, it should include the wiring of devices located in high places such as attics, roof levels of parking lots, parking lights, etc.[50][51] After passing through the SPDs in the marshalling cabinets the wiring can pass through conduits into other remote, nearly adjacent, cabinets that contain the input & output connections to for digital system panels (fire alarm, security access control, computer clean power, programmable logic controllers (PLCs), etc.

Quarter-wave coaxial surge arrestor

Used in RF signal transmission paths, this technology features a tuned quarter-wavelength short-circuit stub that allows it to pass a bandwidth of frequencies, but presents a short to any other signals, especially down towards DC. The passbands can be narrowband (about ±5% to ±10% bandwidth) or wideband (above ±25% to ±50% bandwidth). Quarter-wave coax surge arrestors have coaxial terminals, compatible with common coax cable connectors (especially N or 7-16 types). They provide the most rugged available protection for RF signals above 400 MHz; at these frequencies they can perform much better than the gas discharge cells typically used in the universal/broadband coax surge arrestors. Quarter-wave arrestors are useful for telecommunications applications, such as Wi-Fi at 2.4 or 5 GHz but less useful for TV/CATV frequencies. Since a quarter-wave arrestor shorts out the line for low frequencies, it is not compatible with systems which send DC power for a LNB up the coaxial downlink.

Series mode (SM) surge suppressors

These devices are not rated in joules because they operate differently from the earlier suppressors, and they do not depend on materials that inherently wear out during repeated surges. SM suppressors are primarily used to control transient voltage surges on electrical power feeds to protected devices. They are essentially heavy-duty low-pass filters connected so that they allow 50 or 60 Hz line voltages through to the load, while blocking and diverting higher frequencies. This type of suppressor differs from others by using banks of inductors, capacitors and resistors that suppress voltage surges and inrush current to the neutral wire, whereas other designs shunt to the ground wire.[52] Surges are not diverted but actually suppressed. The inductors slow down the energy. Since the inductor in series with the circuit path slows the current spike, the peak surge energy is spread out in the time domain and harmlessly absorbed and slowly released from a capacitor bank.[53]

Experimental results show that most surge energies occur at under 100 joules, so exceeding the SM design parameters is unlikely. SM suppressors do not present a fire risk should the absorbed energy exceed design limits of the dielectric material of the components because the surge energy is also limited via arc-over to ground during lightning strikes, leaving a surge remnant that often does not exceed a theoretical maximum (such as 6000 V at 3000 A with a modeled shape of 8 × 20 microsecond waveform specified by IEEE/ANSI C62.41). Because SMs work on both the current rise and the voltage rise, they can safely operate in the worst surge environments.

SM suppression focuses its protective philosophy on a power supply input, but offers nothing to protect against surges appearing between the input of an SM device and data lines, such as antennae, telephone or LAN connections, or multiple such devices cascaded and linked to the primary devices. This is because they do not divert surge energy to the ground line. Data transmission requires the ground line to be clean in order to be used as a reference point. In this design philosophy, such events are already protected against by the SM device before the power supply. NIST reports that "Sending them [surges] down the drain of a grounding conductor only makes them reappear within a microsecond about 200 meters away on some other conductor."[54] So having protection on a data transmission line is only required if surges are diverted to the ground line.

SM devices tend to be bulkier and heavier than devices utilizing other surge suppression technologies. The initial costs of SM filters are higher, typically 130 USD and up, but a long service life can be expected if they are used properly. In-field installation costs can be higher, since SM devices are installed in series with the power feed, requiring the feed to be cut and reconnected.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Unmatched MOVs have a tolerance of approximately ±10% on voltage ratings, which may not be sufficient.[16] For more details on the effectiveness of parallel-connected MOVs, see § Joules rating.

References

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External links

  • Surge protector at Curlie
  • Surge Protection in Low-Voltage AC Power Circuits: An 8-part Anthology A comprehensive compilation of papers and articles published 1963-2003, hosted by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), an agency of the US Commerce Department.
  • NEMA Surge Protection Institute
  • Important Points About Surge Protectors. Surgege Protector Tech.
  • Intro to TVS on AllAboutCircuits
  • Inductive Load Arc Suppression

surge, protector, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, article, august, 2020, surge, protector, spike, suppressor, surge, suppressor, surge, di. This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article August 2020 A surge protector or spike suppressor surge suppressor surge diverter 1 surge protection device SPD or transient voltage surge suppressor TVSS is an appliance or device intended to protect electrical devices from voltage spikes in alternating current AC circuits A voltage spike is a transient event typically lasting 1 to 30 microseconds that may reach over 1 000 volts Lightning that hits a power line can give a spike of over 100 000 volts and can burn through wiring insulation and cause fires but even modest spikes can destroy a wide variety of electronic devices computers battery chargers modems and TVs etc that happen to be plugged in at the time Typically the surge device will trigger at a set voltage around 3 to 4 times the mains voltage and divert the current to earth Some devices may absorb the spike and release it as heat They are generally rated according to the amount of energy in joules they can absorb Surge Protection Device SPD for installation in a low voltage distribution board Contents 1 Voltage spikes 1 1 Surge currents 2 Definitions 3 Protectors 4 Transient voltage suppressor 4 1 Comparison of transient suppressors 5 Domestic use 6 Industrial use 6 1 Types 7 Important specifications 7 1 Clamping voltage 7 2 Joule rating 7 3 Response time 7 4 Standards 8 Primary components 8 1 Metal oxide varistor 8 2 Transient voltage suppression diode 8 3 Thyristor surge protection device TSPD 8 4 Gas discharge tube GDT spark gap 8 5 Selenium voltage suppressor 8 6 Carbon block spark gap overvoltage suppressor 8 7 Inductors line reactors chokes capacitors 8 8 Marshalling cabinet panels with surge protectors 8 9 Quarter wave coaxial surge arrestor 8 10 Series mode SM surge suppressors 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksVoltage spikes EditIn an AC circuit a voltage spike is a transient event typically lasting 1 to 30 microseconds that may reach over 1 000 volts Lightning that hits a power line can give many thousands sometimes 100 000 or more volts A motor when switched off can generate a spike of 1 000 or more volts Spikes can degrade wiring insulation and destroy electronic devices like light bulbs battery chargers modems TVs and other consumer electronics Spikes can also occur on telephone and data lines when AC main lines accidentally connect to them or lightning hits them or if the telephone and data lines travel near lines with a spike and the voltage is induced A long term surge lasting seconds minutes or hours caused by power transformer failures such as a lost neutral or other power company error are not protected by transient protectors Long term surges can destroy the protectors in an entire building or area Even tens of milliseconds can be longer than a protector can handle Long term surges may or may not be handled by fuses and overvoltage relays Surge currents Edit This section may be too technical for most readers to understand Please help improve it to make it understandable to non experts without removing the technical details June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Surge currents are much lower in Category A locations than at Category B and C locations Category A loads are more than 60 feet of wire length from the service entrance to the load Category A loads can be exposed to 6kV 0 5kA surge currents Category B loads are more than 30 feet from the service entrance and less than 60 feet of wire length from the service entrance to the load Category B loads can be exposed to 6kV 3kA surge currents Category C loads are less than 30 feet from the service entrance to the load Category C loads can be exposed to 20kV 10kA surge currents 2 A building s wiring adds impedance that limits the surge current that reaches the loads There is less surge current at longer wire distances and where more impedance is present between the service entrance and the load 3 A coiled extension cord can be used to increase the wire length to more than 60 feet and to increase the impedance between the service entrance and the load 4 Definitions EditThe terms surge protection device SPD and transient voltage surge suppressor TVSS are used to describe electrical devices typically installed in power distribution panels process control systems communications systems and other heavy duty industrial systems for the purpose of protecting against electrical surges and spikes including those caused by lightning Scaled down versions of these devices are sometimes installed in residential service entrance electrical panels to protect equipment in a household from similar hazards 5 Protectors EditA transient surge protector attempts to limit the voltage supplied to an electric device by either blocking or shorting current to reduce the voltage below a safe threshold Blocking is done by using inductors which inhibit a sudden change in current Shorting is done by spark gaps discharge tubes zener type semiconductors and metal oxide varistors MOVs all of which begin to conduct current once a certain voltage threshold is reached or by capacitors which inhibit a sudden change in voltage Some surge protectors use multiple elements The most common and effective way is the shorting method in which the electrical lines are temporarily shorted together as by a spark gap or clamped to a target voltage as by a MOV resulting in a large current flow The voltage is reduced as the shorting current flows through the resistance in the power lines The spike s energy is dissipated in the power lines and or the ground or in the body of the MOV converted to heat Since a spike lasts only 10s of microseconds the temperature rise is minimal However if the spike is large enough or long enough like a nearby hit by lightning there might not be enough power line or ground resistance and the MOV or other protection element can be destroyed and power lines melted Surge protectors for homes can be in power strips used inside or a device outside at the power panel Sockets in a modern house uses three wires line neutral and ground Many protectors will connect to all three in pairs line neutral line ground and neutral ground because there are conditions such as lightning where both line and neutral have high voltage spikes that need to be shorted to ground A power strip with built in surge protector and multiple outlets Additionally some consumer grade protectors have ports for Ethernet and coaxial cables and plugging them in allows the surge protector to shield them from external electrical damage 6 Transient voltage suppressor EditA transient voltage suppressor or TVS is a general classification of electronic components that are designed to react to sudden or momentary overvoltage conditions One such common device used for this purpose is known as the transient voltage suppression diode a Zener diode designed to protect electronics device against overvoltages Another design alternative applies a family of products that are known as metal oxide varistors MOV 7 The characteristic of a TVS requires that it respond to overvoltages faster than other common overvoltage protection components such as varistors or gas discharge tubes This makes TVS devices or components useful for protection against very fast and often damaging voltage spikes These fast overvoltage spikes are present on all distribution networks and can be caused by either internal or external events such as lightning or motor arcing 8 Applications of transient voltage suppression diodes are used for unidirectional or bidirectional electrostatic discharge protection of transmission or data lines in electronic circuits MOV based TVSs are used to protect home electronics distribution systems and may accommodate industrial level power distribution disturbances saving downtime and damage to equipment The level of energy in a transient overvoltage can be equated to energy measured in joules or related to electric current when devices are rated for various applications These bursts of overvoltage can be measured with specialized electronic meters that can show power disturbances of thousands of volts amplitude that last for a few microseconds or less It is possible for a MOV to overheat when exposed to overvoltage sufficient for the MOV to start conducting but not enough to totally destroy it or to blow a house fuse If the overvoltage condition persists long enough to cause significant heating of the MOV it can result in thermal damage to the device and start a fire 9 10 Comparison of transient suppressors Edit Type Surge capability typical Lifetime number of surges Response time Shunt capacitance Leakage current approximate TVS diode 1 A small surface mount device to 15 kA large through hole device 1 ps limited by pin lengths lt 1 pF small surface mount device to gt 10 nF large through hole device 1 mAMetal oxide varistor MOV Up to 70 kA 100 A 8x20 ms pulse shape 1 000 surges 1 ns Typically 100 1 000 pF 10 mAAvalanche diode Zener diode 50 A 50 A 8x20 ms pulse shape infinite lt 1 ms 50 pF 10 mAGas discharge tube gt 20 kA 20 kA 8x20 ms pulse width gt 20 surges lt 5 ms lt 1 pF lt 1 nA TVS diodes The devices shown here are able to handle 1 5 kW of peak power for a short period Metal oxide varistors Gas discharge tubeDomestic use Edit A surge protection device mounted on a residential circuit breaker panel Many power strips have basic surge protection built in these are typically clearly labeled as such However in unregulated countries there are power strips labelled as surge or spike protectors that only have a capacitor or RFI circuit or nothing that do not provide true or any spike protection Industrial use Edit Surge arresters Large surge arrester A surge arrester surge protection device SPD or transient voltage surge suppressor TVSS is used to protect equipment in power transmission and distribution systems The energy criterion for various insulation material can be compared by impulse ratio A surge arrester should have a low impulse ratio so that a surge incident on the surge arrester may be bypassed to the ground instead of passing through the apparatus To protect a unit of equipment from transients occurring on an attached conductor a surge arrester is connected to the conductor just before it enters the equipment The surge arrester is also connected to ground and functions by routing energy from an over voltage transient to ground if one occurs while isolating the conductor from ground at normal operating voltages This is usually achieved through use of a varistor which has substantially different resistances at different voltages Surge arresters are not generally designed to protect against a direct lightning strike to a conductor but rather against electrical transients resulting from lightning strikes occurring in the vicinity of the conductor citation needed Lightning which strikes the earth results in ground currents which can pass over buried conductors and induce a transient that propagates outward towards the ends of the conductor The same kind of induction happens in overhead and above ground conductors which experience the passing energy of an atmospheric EMP caused by the lightning flash Surge arresters only protect against induced transients characteristic of a lightning discharge s rapid rise time and will not protect against electrification caused by a direct strike to the conductor Transients similar to lightning induced such as from a high voltage system s fault switching may also be safely diverted to ground however continuous overcurrents are not protected against by these devices The energy in a handled transient is substantially less than that of a lightning discharge however it is still of sufficient quantity to cause equipment damage and often requires protection Without very thick insulation which is generally cost prohibitive most conductors running more than minimal distances greater than approximately 50 feet will experience lightning induced transients at some time during use Because the transient is usually initiated at some point between the two ends of the conductor most applications install a surge arrester just before the conductor lands in each piece of equipment to be protected Each conductor must be protected as each will have its own transient induced and each SPD must provide a pathway to earth to safely divert the transient away from the protected component The one notable exception where they are not installed at both ends is in high voltage distribution systems In general the induced voltage is not sufficient to do damage at the electric generation end of the lines however installation at the service entrance to a building is key to protecting downstream products that are not as robust Types Edit Low voltage surge arrester Apply in Low voltage distribution system exchange of electrical appliances protector low voltage distribution transformer windings Distribution arrester Apply in 3 kV 6 kV 10 kV AC power distribution system to protect distribution transformers cables and power station equipment The station type of common valve arrester Used to protect the 3 220 kV transformer station equipment and communication system Magnetic blow valve station arrester Use to 35 500 kV protect communication systems transformers and other equipment Protection of rotating machine using magnetic blow valve arrester Used to protect the AC generator and motor insulation Line Magnetic blow valve arrester Used to protect 330 kV and above communication system circuit equipment insulation DC or blowing valve type arrester Use to protect the DC system s insulation of electrical equipment Neutral protection arrester Apply in motor or the transformer s neutral protection Fiber tube arrester Apply in the power station s wires and the weaknesses protection in the insulated Plug in Signal Arrester Used to twisted pair transmission line in order to protect communications and computer systems A Gas Tube Arrester commonly used in the sockets of Coaxial cables High frequency feeder arrester Used to protect the microwave mobile base stations satellite receiver etc Receptacle type surge arrester Use to Protect the terminal Electronic equipment Signal Arrester Apply in MODEM DDN line fax phone process control signal circuit etc Network arrester Apply in servers workstations interfaces etc Coaxial cable lightning arrester Used on the coaxial cable to protect the wireless transmission and receiving systemImportant specifications EditThese are some of the most prominently featured specifications which define a surge protector for AC mains as well as for some data communications protection applications UK type G socket adapter with surge protector Clamping voltage Edit Also known as the let through voltage this specifies what spike voltage will cause the protective components inside a surge protector to short or clamp 11 A lower clamping voltage indicates better protection but can sometimes result in a shorter life expectancy for the overall protective system The lowest three levels of protection defined in the UL rating are 330 V 400 V and 500 V The standard let through voltage for 120 V AC devices is 330 volts 12 Underwriters Laboratories UL 13 a global independent safety science company defines how a protector may be used safely UL 1449 became compliance mandatory in jurisdictions that adopted the NEC with the 3rd edition in September 2009 to increase safety compared to products conforming to the 2nd edition A measured limiting voltage test using six times higher current and energy defines a voltage protection rating VPR For a specific protector this voltage may be higher compared to a Suppressed Voltage Ratings SVR in previous editions that measured let through voltage with less current Due to non linear characteristics of protectors let through voltages defined by 2nd edition and 3rd edition testing are not comparable 12 14 A protector may be larger to obtain a same let through voltage during 3rd edition testing Therefore a 3rd edition or later protector should provide superior safety with increased life expectancy A protector with a higher let through voltage e g 400 V vs 330 V will pass a higher voltage to the connected device The design of the connected device determines whether this pass through spike will cause damage Motors and mechanical devices are usually not affected Some especially older electronic parts like chargers LED or CFL bulbs and computerized appliances are sensitive and can be compromised and have their life reduced Joule rating Edit The Joule rating number defines how much energy a MOV based surge protector can theoretically absorb in a single event without failure Better protectors exceed ratings of 1 000 joules and 40 000 amperes Since the actual duration of a spike is only about 10 microseconds citation needed the actual dissipated energy is low Any more than that and the MOV will fuse or sometimes short and melt hopefully blowing a fuse disconnecting itself from the circuit The MOV or other shorting device requires resistance in the supply line in order to limit the voltage For large low resistance power lines a higher joule rated MOV is required Inside a house with smaller wires that have more resistance a smaller MOV is acceptable Every time a MOV shorts its internal structure is changed and its threshold voltage reduced slightly After many spikes the threshold voltage can reduce enough to be near the line voltage i e 120 vac or 240 vac At this point the MOV will partially conduct and heat up and eventually fail sometimes in a dramatic meltdown or even a fire Most modern surge protectors have circuit breakers and temperature fuses to prevent serious consequences Many also have an LED light to indicate if the MOVs are still functioning The joule rating is commonly quoted for comparing MOV based surge protectors An average surge spike is of short duration lasting for nanoseconds to microseconds and experimentally modeled surge energy can be less than 100 joules 15 Well designed surge protectors consider the resistance of the lines that supply the power the chance of lightning or other seriously energetic spike and specify the MOVs accordingly A little battery charger might include a MOV of only 1 watt whereas a surge strip will have a 20 watt MOV or several of them in parallel A house protector will have a large block type MOV Some manufacturers commonly design higher joule rated surge protectors by connecting multiple MOVs in parallel and this can produce a misleading rating Since individual MOVs have slightly different voltage thresholds and non linear responses when exposed to the same voltage curve any given MOV might be more sensitive than others This can cause one MOV in a group to conduct more a phenomenon called current hogging leading to possible overuse and eventual premature failure of that component However the other MOVs in the group do help a little as they start to conduct as the voltage continues to rise as it does since a MOV does not have a sharp threshold It may start to short at 270 volts but not reach full short until 450 or more volts A second MOV might start at 290 volts and another at 320 volts so they all can help clamp the voltage and at full current there is a series ballast effect that improves current sharing but stating the actual joule rating as the sum of all the individual MOVs does not accurately reflect the total clamping ability The first MOV may bear more of the burden and fail earlier One MOV manufacturer recommends using fewer but bigger MOVs e g 60 mm vs 40 mm diameter if they can fit in the device and to match them and derate them In some cases it may take four 40 mm MOVs to be equivalent to one 60 mm MOV 16 A further problem is that if a single inline fuse is placed in series with a group of paralleled MOVs as a disconnect safety feature it will open and disconnect all remaining working MOVs The effective surge energy absorption capacity of the entire system is dependent on the MOV matching so derating by 20 or more is usually required This limitation can be managed by using carefully matched sets of MOVs matched according to manufacturer s specification 17 16 According to industry testing standards based on IEEE and ANSI assumptions power line surges inside a building can be up to 6 000 volts and 3 000 amperes and deliver up to 90 joules of energy including surges from external sources not including lightning strikes The common assumptions regarding lightning specifically based ANSI IEEE C62 41 and UL 1449 3rd Edition at time of this writing are that minimum lightning based power line surges inside a building are typically 10 000 amperes or 10 kiloamperes kA This is based on 20 kA striking a power line the imparted current then traveling equally in both directions on the power line with the resulting 10 kA traveling into the building or home These assumptions are based on an average approximation for testing minimum standards While 10 kA is typically good enough for minimum protection against lightning strikes it is possible for a lightning strike to impart up to 200 kA to a power line with 100 kA traveling in each direction Lightning and other high energy transient voltage surges can be suppressed with pole mounted suppressors by the utility or with an owner supplied whole house surge protector A whole house product is more expensive than simple single outlet surge protectors and often needs professional installation on the incoming electrical power feed however they prevent power line spikes from entering the house Damage from direct lightning strikes via other paths must be controlled separately Response time Edit Surge protectors don t operate instantaneously a slight delay exists some few nanoseconds With longer response time and depending on system impedance the connected equipment may be exposed to some of the surge However surges typically are much slower and take around a few microseconds to reach their peak voltage and a surge protector with a nanosecond response time would kick in fast enough to suppress the most damaging portion of the spike 18 Thus response time under standard testing is not a useful measure of a surge protector s ability when comparing MOV devices All MOVs have response times measured in nanoseconds while test waveforms usually used to design and calibrate surge protectors are all based on modeled waveforms of surges measured in microseconds As a result MOV based protectors have no trouble producing impressive response time specs Slower responding technologies notably GDTs may have difficulty protecting against fast spikes Therefore good designs incorporating slower but otherwise useful technologies usually combine them with faster acting components to provide more comprehensive protection 19 A two pole surge protector for installation in distribution boards Standards Edit Some frequently listed standards include IEC 61643 11 Low voltage surge protective devices Part 11 Surge protective devices connected to low voltage power systems Requirements and test methods replaces IEC 61643 1 IEC 61643 21 Low voltage surge protective devices Part 21 Surge protective devices connected to telecommunications and signalling networks Performance requirements and testing methods IEC 61643 22 Low voltage surge protective devices Part 22 Surge protective devices connected to telecommunications and signalling networks Selection and application principles EN 61643 11 61643 21 and 61643 22 Telcordia Technologies Technical Reference TR NWT 001011 ANSI IEEE C62 xx Underwriters Laboratories UL 1449 AS NZS 1768Each standard defines different protector characteristics test vectors or operational purpose The 3rd Edition of UL Standard 1449 for SPDs was a major rewrite of previous editions and was also accepted as an ANSI standard for the first time 20 21 A subsequent revision in 2015 included the addition of low voltage circuits for USB charging ports and associated batteries 22 23 EN 62305 and ANSI IEEE C62 xx define what spikes a protector might be expected to divert EN 61643 11 and 61643 21 specify both the product s performance and safety requirements In contrast the IEC only writes standards and does not certify any particular product as meeting those standards IEC Standards are used by members of the CB Scheme of international agreements to test and certify products for safety compliance None of those standards guarantee that a protector will provide proper protection in a given application Each standard defines what a protector should do or might accomplish based on standardized tests that may or may not correlate to conditions present in a particular real world situation A specialized engineering analysis may be needed to provide sufficient protection especially in situations of high lightning risk In addition the following standards are not standards for standalone surge protectors but are instead meant for testing surge immunity in electrical and electronic equipment as a whole Thus they re frequently used in the design and test of surge protection circuitry IEC 61000 4 2 Electrostatic discharge immunity test IEC 61000 4 4 Electrical fast transient burst immunity test IEC 61000 4 5 Surge immunity testPrimary components EditSystems used to reduce or limit high voltage surges 24 25 can include one or more of the following types of electronic components Some surge suppression systems use multiple technologies since each method has its strong and weak points 19 26 27 The first six methods listed operate primarily by diverting unwanted surge energy away from the protected load through a protective component connected in a parallel or shunted topology The last two methods also block unwanted energy by using a protective component connected in series with the power feed to the protected load and additionally may shunt the unwanted energy like the earlier systems Single outlet surge protector with visible connection and protection lights Metal oxide varistor Edit Further information Varistor A metal oxide varistor MOV consists of a bulk semiconductor material typically sintered granular zinc oxide that can conduct large currents when presented with a voltage above its rated voltage 12 28 MOVs typically limit voltages to about 3 to 4 times the normal circuit voltage by diverting surge current elsewhere than the protected load MOVs may be connected in parallel to increase current capability and life expectancy providing they are matched sets a MOVs have finite life expectancy and degrade when exposed to a few large transients or many small transients 29 30 Every time an MOV activates its threshold voltage reduces slightly After many spikes the threshold voltage can reduce enough to be near the protection voltage either mains or data At this point the MOV conducts more and more often heats up and finally fails In data circuits the data channel becomes shorted and non functional In a power circuit you may get a dramatic meltdown or even a fire if not protected by a fuse of some kind 31 Modern surge strips and house protectors have circuit breakers and temperature fuses to prevent serious consequences A thermal fuse disconnects the MOV when it gets too hot Only the MOV is disconnected leaving the rest of the circuit working but without surge protection Often there is an LED light to indicate if the MOVs are still functioning Older surge strips had no thermal fuse and relied on a 10 or 15 amp circuit breaker which usually blew only after the MOVs had smoked burned popped melted and permanently shorted A failing MOV is a fire risk which is a reason for the National Fire Protection Association s NFPA 32 UL1449 in 1986 33 and subsequent revisions in 1998 2009 and 2015 NFPA s primary concern is protection from fire 12 34 Therefore all MOV based protectors intended for long term use should have an indicator that the protective components have failed and this indication must be checked on a regular basis to ensure that protection is still functioning 35 Because of their good price performance ratio MOVs are the most common protector component in low cost basic AC power protectors Transient voltage suppression diode Edit A transient voltage suppression diode TVS diode is a type of avalanche diode which can limit voltage spikes These components provide the fastest limiting action of protective components theoretically in picoseconds but have a relatively low energy absorbing capability Voltages can be clamped to less than twice the normal operation voltage If current impulses remain within the device ratings life expectancy is exceptionally long clarification needed If component ratings are exceeded the diode may fail as a permanent short circuit in such cases protection may remain but normal circuit operation is terminated in the case of low power signal lines Due to their relatively limited current capacity TVS diodes are often restricted to circuits with smaller current spikes TVS diodes are also used where spikes occur significantly more often than once a year since this component will not degrade when used within its ratings A unique type of TVS diode trade names Transzorb or Transil contains reversed paired series avalanche diodes for bi polar operation TVS diodes are often used in high speed but low power circuits such as occur in data communications These devices can be paired in series with another diode to provide low capacitance 36 as required in communication circuits Thyristor surge protection device TSPD Edit Further information Thyristor A Trisil is a type of thyristor surge protection device TSPD a specialized solid state electronic device used in crowbar circuits to protect against overvoltage conditions A SIDACtor is another thyristor type device used for similar protective purposes These thyristor family devices can be viewed as having characteristics much like a spark gap or a GDT but can operate much faster They are related to TVS diodes but can break over to a low clamping voltage analogous to an ionized and conducting spark gap After triggering the low clamping voltage allows large current surges while limiting heat dissipation in the device Gas discharge tube GDT spark gap Edit Typical low power lightning protection circuit Note MOVs blue disks and GDTs small silver cylinders A gas discharge tube GDT is a sealed glass enclosed device containing a special gas mixture trapped between two electrodes which conducts electric current after becoming ionized by a high voltage spike 37 GDTs can conduct more current for their size than other components Like MOVs GDTs have a finite life expectancy and can handle a few very large transients or a greater number of smaller transients The typical failure mode occurs when the triggering voltage rises so high that the device becomes ineffective although lightning surges can occasionally cause a dead short GDTs take a relatively long time to trigger longer than a lightning strike of 60 ns to 70 ns 38 permitting a higher voltage spike to pass through before the GDT conducts significant current It is not uncommon for a GDT to let through pulses of 500 V or more of 100 ns in duration In some cases additional protective components are necessary to prevent damage to a protected load caused by high speed let through voltage which occurs before the GDT begins to operate The triggering voltages are typically 400 600 volts for gas tubes and those that are UL Standard 497 listed typically have high surge current ratings 5 000 to 10 000 amperes 8x20 µs 39 GDTs create an effective short circuit when triggered so that if any electrical energy spike signal or power is present the GDT will short this Once triggered a GDT will continue conducting called follow on current until all electric current sufficiently diminishes and the gas discharge quenches Unlike other shunt protector devices a GDT once triggered will continue to conduct at a voltage less than the high voltage that initially ionized the gas this behavior is called negative resistance Additional auxiliary circuitry may be needed in DC and some AC applications to suppress follow on current to prevent it from destroying the GDT after the initiating spike has dissipated Some GDTs are designed to deliberately short out to a grounded terminal when overheated thereby triggering an external fuse or circuit breaker 40 Many GDTs are light sensitive in that exposure to light lowers their triggering voltage Therefore GDTs should be shielded from light exposure or opaque versions that are insensitive to light should be used The CG2 SN series of surge arrestors formerly produced by C P Clare are advertised as being non radioactive and the datasheet for that series states that some members of the CG CG2 series 75 470V are radioactive 41 Due to their exceptionally low capacitance GDTs are commonly used on high frequency lines such as those used in telecommunications equipment Because of their high current handling capability GDTs can also be used to protect power lines but the follow on current problem must be controlled Selenium voltage suppressor Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message An overvoltage clamping bulk semiconductor similar to an MOV though it does not clamp as well However it usually has a longer life than an MOV It is used mostly in high energy DC circuits like the exciter field of an alternator It can dissipate power continuously and it retains its clamping characteristics throughout the surge event if properly sized Carbon block spark gap overvoltage suppressor Edit A telephone network interface device with spark gap overvoltage suppressors The two brass hex head objects on the left cover the suppressors which act to short overvoltage on the tip or ring lines to ground A spark gap is one of the oldest protective electrical technologies still found in telephone circuits having been developed in the nineteenth century A carbon rod electrode is held with an insulator at a specific distance from a second electrode The gap dimension determines the voltage at which a spark will jump between the two parts and short to ground The typical spacing for telephone applications in North America is 0 076 mm 0 003 inches 42 Carbon block suppressors are similar to gas arrestors GDTs but with the two electrodes exposed to the air so their behavior is affected by the surrounding atmosphere especially the humidity Since their operation produces an open spark these devices should never be installed where an explosive atmosphere may develop Inductors line reactors chokes capacitors Edit Inductors Line Reactors Chokes and Capacitors are used to limit fault currents and can reduce or prevent overvoltage events 43 In applications that limit fault currents inductors are more commonly known as an electrical line reactors or a choke Line reactors can prevent overvoltage trips increase the reliability and life of solid state devices and reduce nuisance trips 44 45 46 Marshalling cabinet panels with surge protectors Edit Metal marshalling cabinet panels can allow surge protection device SPD failures to be contained remotely from digital devices and electrical controllers Direct flashes of lightning and lightning surge on secondary systems can cause catastrophic failures of SPDs Catastrophic failures of SPDs can release fireballs of metal fragments and clouds of conductive carbon soot Marshalling panels keep such hazards from reaching the digital and control devices that are mounted in the remote main control panels 47 48 49 Marshalling cabinet panels are used for digital system panels fire alarm security access control computer clean power etc Wiring and cables to be protected include both the power supply and any wiring signaling circuit initiating device circuit shields etc which extend beyond the building by underground overhead or other means such as walkways bridges etc In addition it should include the wiring of devices located in high places such as attics roof levels of parking lots parking lights etc 50 51 After passing through the SPDs in the marshalling cabinets the wiring can pass through conduits into other remote nearly adjacent cabinets that contain the input amp output connections to for digital system panels fire alarm security access control computer clean power programmable logic controllers PLCs etc Quarter wave coaxial surge arrestor Edit Used in RF signal transmission paths this technology features a tuned quarter wavelength short circuit stub that allows it to pass a bandwidth of frequencies but presents a short to any other signals especially down towards DC The passbands can be narrowband about 5 to 10 bandwidth or wideband above 25 to 50 bandwidth Quarter wave coax surge arrestors have coaxial terminals compatible with common coax cable connectors especially N or 7 16 types They provide the most rugged available protection for RF signals above 400 MHz at these frequencies they can perform much better than the gas discharge cells typically used in the universal broadband coax surge arrestors Quarter wave arrestors are useful for telecommunications applications such as Wi Fi at 2 4 or 5 GHz but less useful for TV CATV frequencies Since a quarter wave arrestor shorts out the line for low frequencies it is not compatible with systems which send DC power for a LNB up the coaxial downlink Series mode SM surge suppressors Edit These devices are not rated in joules because they operate differently from the earlier suppressors and they do not depend on materials that inherently wear out during repeated surges SM suppressors are primarily used to control transient voltage surges on electrical power feeds to protected devices They are essentially heavy duty low pass filters connected so that they allow 50 or 60 Hz line voltages through to the load while blocking and diverting higher frequencies This type of suppressor differs from others by using banks of inductors capacitors and resistors that suppress voltage surges and inrush current to the neutral wire whereas other designs shunt to the ground wire 52 Surges are not diverted but actually suppressed The inductors slow down the energy Since the inductor in series with the circuit path slows the current spike the peak surge energy is spread out in the time domain and harmlessly absorbed and slowly released from a capacitor bank 53 Experimental results show that most surge energies occur at under 100 joules so exceeding the SM design parameters is unlikely SM suppressors do not present a fire risk should the absorbed energy exceed design limits of the dielectric material of the components because the surge energy is also limited via arc over to ground during lightning strikes leaving a surge remnant that often does not exceed a theoretical maximum such as 6000 V at 3000 A with a modeled shape of 8 20 microsecond waveform specified by IEEE ANSI C62 41 Because SMs work on both the current rise and the voltage rise they can safely operate in the worst surge environments SM suppression focuses its protective philosophy on a power supply input but offers nothing to protect against surges appearing between the input of an SM device and data lines such as antennae telephone or LAN connections or multiple such devices cascaded and linked to the primary devices This is because they do not divert surge energy to the ground line Data transmission requires the ground line to be clean in order to be used as a reference point In this design philosophy such events are already protected against by the SM device before the power supply NIST reports that Sending them surges down the drain of a grounding conductor only makes them reappear within a microsecond about 200 meters away on some other conductor 54 So having protection on a data transmission line is only required if surges are diverted to the ground line SM devices tend to be bulkier and heavier than devices utilizing other surge suppression technologies The initial costs of SM filters are higher typically 130 USD and up but a long service life can be expected if they are used properly In field installation costs can be higher since SM devices are installed in series with the power feed requiring the feed to be cut and reconnected See also EditLightning arrester Lightning rodNotes Edit Unmatched MOVs have a tolerance of approximately 10 on voltage ratings which may not be sufficient 16 For more details on the effectiveness of parallel connected MOVs see Joules rating References Edit Energy Safe Victoria Safety switches surge diverters and circuit breakers Gas and electrical safety in the home Energy Safe Victoria Archived from the original on 2016 05 10 Retrieved 2016 05 04 https www ewh ieee org r3 nashville events 2006 TVSS pdf Understanding TVSS and its Application Chris M Finen P E Application Engineer Eaton Electrical Eaton Cutler Hammer https www ecmweb com power quality reliability article 20900951 understanding surge protective device ratings Understanding Surge Protective Device Ratings 21 June 2011 Electrical Construction amp Maintenance EC amp M https nvlpubs nist gov nistpubs Legacy FIPS fipspub94 pdf Guideline on Electrical Power For Data Processing Installations Page 40 Figure 27 a coiled extension cord makes a weak longitudinal transformer a balun Federal Information Processing Standards Publication 94 21 September 1983 Surge Protection in Low Voltage AC Power Circuits An Anthology Part 8 Coordination of Cascaded Surge Protective Devices PDF NIST Archived from the original PDF on 8 December 2020 Retrieved 15 June 2022 Uysal Ceren 2022 06 13 7 best surge protectors to keep the electricity safe running around your house Interesting Engineering Retrieved 2022 06 13 What is a Silicon Transient Voltage Suppressor element14 element 14 com Retrieved 23 September 2015 Transient Voltage Suppressors TVS for Automot element14 element 14 com Retrieved 23 September 2015 metal oxide varistors Circuit Breakers Blog Expert Safety and Usage Information circuitbreakersblog com Retrieved 23 September 2015 esdjournal com Terms C grouper IEEE org Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 18 January 2018 a b c d Rosch Winn May 2008 UL 1449 3rd Edition PDF Eaton Corporation Eaton Corporation Retrieved 12 March 2016 About UL UL UL com 18 July 2014 Retrieved 18 January 2018 UL 1449 Third Edition SPD TVSS Changes Effective September 29 2009 PDF No Joules for Surges Relevant and Realistic Assessment of Surge Stress Threats PDF NIST gov Archived from the original PDF on 2013 02 25 Retrieved 18 January 2018 a b c Walaszczyk et al 2001 Does Size Really Matter An Exploration of Paralleling Multiple Lower Energy Movs PDF Littelfuse com Retrieved 18 January 2018 Littelfuse Inc EC638 Littelfuse Varistor Design Examples PDF Littelfuse Inc Retrieved 2011 03 29 See pages 7 8 Parallel Operation of Varistors Terms R grouper IEEE org Archived from the original on 9 April 2017 Retrieved 18 January 2018 a b Littelfuse Inc EC640 Combining GDTs and MOVs for Surge Protection of AC Lines PDF Littelfuse Inc Retrieved 2011 03 29 Eaton Corporation TD01005005E UL 1449 3rd Edition Key Changes PDF Eaton Corporation Archived from the original PDF on 2011 08 15 Retrieved 2011 03 29 Siemens AG Next Generation Surge Protection UL 1449 Third Edition PDF Siemens AG Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 21 Retrieved 2011 03 29 Standard 1449 Standard for Surge Protective Devices UL LLC Retrieved February 18 2016 UL Publishes New Edition of UL 1449 In Compliance Magazine 2 September 2014 Retrieved February 18 2016 Littelfuse Inc AN9769 An Overview of Electromagnetic and Lightning Induced Voltage Transients PDF Littelfuse Inc Retrieved 2011 03 29 Littelfuse Inc AN9768 Transient Suppression Devices and Principles PDF Littelfuse Inc Retrieved 2011 03 29 Circuit Components Inc Filtering and Surge Suppression Fundamentals PDF Circuit Components Inc Archived from the original PDF on 2010 12 13 Retrieved 2011 03 29 Includes extensive comparison of design tradeoffs among various surge suppression technologies Underwriters Laboratories Application Guideline UL 6500 Second Edition Archived from the original on 2011 07 16 Retrieved 2011 03 29 Connection of MOVs and GDTs in series Littelfuse Inc AN9767 Littelfuse Varistors Basic Properties Terminology and Theory PDF Littelfuse Inc Retrieved 2011 03 29 Brown Kenneth March 2004 Metal Oxide Varistor Degradation IAEI Magazine Archived from the original on 2011 07 19 Retrieved 2011 03 30 Walaszczyk et al 2001 Does Size Really Matter An Exploration of Paralleling Multiple Lower Energy Movs See Figures 4 amp 5 for Pulse Life Curves Q How does an MOV fail Application Note 9311 The ABCs of MOVs PDF pp 10 48 retrieved 18 January 2018 NFPA About NFPA Archived from the original on 2012 02 12 Retrieved 2012 02 07 http downloads eatoncanada ca downloads Transient 20Voltage 20Surge 20Supp Tech 20Data TVSS 20UL 20spec 201449 pdf dead link Archived copy Archived from the original on 2007 03 16 Retrieved 2007 06 20 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Application Note 9773 Varistor Testing Jan 1998 See Varistor Rating Assurance Tests on page 10 145 for definition of end of lifetime PDF Littelfuse com Retrieved 18 January 2018 SemTech TVS Diode Application Note Rev 9 2000 Archived 2009 01 12 at the Wayback Machine See chart entitled TVS Capacitance vs Transmission Rate Citel Inc Gas Discharge Tube Overview Archived from the original on March 5 2012 Retrieved 2013 05 30 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link https en wikipedia org wiki Lightning Distribution frequency and extent Copied from Wikipedia Lightning Distribution frequency and extent see that article for references and history http lightningsafety com nlsi lhm IEEE Guide pdf How to Protect Your House and Its Contents from Lightning IEEE Guide for Surge Protection of Equipment Connected to AC Power and Communication Circuits 2005 Sankosha Fail Safe Device Retrieved 2011 03 28 C P Clare datasheet Microsemi Semiconductor amp System Solutions Power Matters PDF www Zarlink com Retrieved 18 January 2018 Copied from Inductor Applications Inductors see that Wikipedia article for references and history https www wolfautomation com blog what is a line reactor What is a line reactor and when do I use one Jun 6 2019 Engineers Corner Wolf Automation https literature rockwellautomation com idc groups literature documents wp drives wp016 en p pdf Line Reactors and AC Drives By John T Streicher Rockwell Automation Mequon Wisconsin https download schneider electric com files p enDocType White Paper amp p File Name asc spd wp series v parallel pdf amp p Doc Ref SPD WP SVPSPD Series vs Parallel Surge Protection ASCO Power Technologies Schneider Electric SE Surge Protection for SCADA and Process Control Lightning and Surge Protection Tristan King Novaris Pty Ltd https www mtl inst com images uploads AN 904 1004 Rev G pdf Surge protection for intrinsically safe systems Crouse Hinds See Figure 4 on page 3 Recommended earthing system for loops including intrinsic safety barrier IS barriers and SPDs https www nist gov system files documents pml div684 TOVs on SPDs pdf temporary over voltage TOV Effects on Surge Protective Devices Dalibor Kladar Eaton Electrical Francois Martzloff Surges Happen Doni Nastasi EPRI Solutions https www tampaairport com sites default master files Design 20Criteria 20Manual 2010 16 17 1 pdf Hillsborough County Aviation Authority Design Criteria Manual October 16 2017 Section 16289 Transient Voltage Suppression https automationforum co what is marshalling cabinet or marshalling panel What is Marshalling Cabinet or Marshalling Panel by Areej June 4 2018 Surge suppression computer definition YourDictionary com Archived from the original on 2 June 2010 Retrieved 18 January 2018 How It Works Brick Wall Brick Wall Retrieved 18 January 2018 Ibacache Rodrigo 13 January 2009 Surge Protection in Low Voltage AC Power Circuits PDF NIST gov Retrieved 18 January 2018 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Surge protectors Surge protector at Curlie Surge Protection in Low Voltage AC Power Circuits An 8 part Anthology A comprehensive compilation of papers and articles published 1963 2003 hosted by the National Institute of Standards and Technology NIST an agency of the US Commerce Department NEMA Surge Protection Institute Important Points About Surge Protectors Surgege Protector Tech Intro to TVS on AllAboutCircuits Inductive Load Arc Suppression Comparison to other transient voltage technologies Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Surge protector amp oldid 1129718469 Surge arrester, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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