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Q: What is a hazardous area?
A: A hazardous area is a location where flammable gases, vapors, or dust may exist in sufficient quantities to produce explosive or ignitable mixtures. -
Q: What are the main types of hazardous materials considered?
A: Gases/vapors and combustible dusts. -
Q: What are the different methods of hazardous area classification?
A:-
IEC/ATEX (Zone classification)
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NEC (Class/Division system – USA)
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Q: What is Zone 0, Zone 1, and Zone 2?
A:-
Zone 0: Continuous presence of explosive atmosphere
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Zone 1: Likely under normal operation
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Zone 2: Unlikely or short-duration presence
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Q: What are the IEC classifications for dust?
A:-
Zone 20: Continuous presence of combustible dust
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Zone 21: Likely during normal operations
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Zone 22: Not likely but possible
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✅ NEC CLASSIFICATION (NORTH AMERICA)
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Q: What is Class I, II, III as per NEC?
A:-
Class I: Gases and vapors
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Class II: Dusts
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Class III: Fibers or flyings
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Q: What are Division 1 and Division 2?
A:-
Division 1: Explosive atmosphere present during normal operation
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Division 2: Present only during abnormal conditions
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Q: How do Class I and Zone systems correlate?
A:-
Class I Div 1 ≈ Zone 0 & Zone 1
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Class I Div 2 ≈ Zone 2
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✅ GAS GROUPS AND TEMPERATURE CLASSES
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Q: What are the gas groups under IEC?
A:-
Group I (mining)
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Group II (surface industries – subdivided into IIA, IIB, IIC)
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Q: What is the significance of Group IIA, IIB, and IIC?
A:
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IIA: Least ignitable gases (e.g., propane)
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IIB: Intermediate (e.g., ethylene)
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IIC: Most ignitable (e.g., hydrogen, acetylene)
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Q: What are temperature classes?
A:
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Classification based on maximum surface temperature (T1–T6)
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Q: Match temperature class T6 with ignition temperature.
A:
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T6: Max surface temp = 85°C; suitable for gases with ignition temp > 85°C
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Q: What temperature class is used for hydrogen atmosphere?
A:
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Usually T1 or T2 due to high ignition temp.
✅ STANDARDS & CODES
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Q: Name the key standards for hazardous area classification.
A:
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IEC 60079 series
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NEC 500, 505
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API RP 500 / 505
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IS 5572 (India)
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Q: What is API RP 500 and RP 505?
A:
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RP 500: Class/Division based classification
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RP 505: Zone-based classification
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Q: What is IS 5572?
A:
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Indian Standard for area classification for electrical installation in hazardous areas.
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Q: What is IEC 60079?
A:
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A standard series covering explosive atmospheres and equipment requirements.
✅ CLASSIFICATION PROCEDURE & PRACTICAL CONSIDERATIONS
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Q: What factors affect hazardous area classification?
A:
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Type of flammable material
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Release source and frequency
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Ventilation
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Quantity of release
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Equipment location
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Q: What is a release source?
A:
A point where flammable gas or vapor can be released under normal or abnormal conditions. -
Q: What are primary, secondary, and continuous release sources?
A:
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Continuous: Always present
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Primary: Normally present during operation
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Secondary: Present only under fault conditions
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Q: How is ventilation considered in area classification?
A:
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Good ventilation reduces the extent of hazardous zones.
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Poor ventilation increases risk and zone size.
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Q: What is the typical hazardous zone extent around a flange?
A:
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Zone 2, with a radius of 1m (varies based on standards and conditions)
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Q: What are the tools used for hazardous area classification?
A:
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DNV software, Shell DEP guidelines, API/IEC zone calculation worksheets.
✅ PRACTICAL IMPLEMENTATION & EQUIPMENT SELECTION
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Q: What is Ex d protection?
A:
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Flameproof enclosure that contains any explosion within the device.
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Q: What is Ex e protection?
A:
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Increased safety; prevents arcs, sparks, and hot surfaces.
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Q: What is Ex i protection?
A:
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Intrinsically safe; limits energy below ignition level.
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Q: Can an Ex d device be installed in Zone 2?
A:
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Yes, Ex d is suitable for Zone 1 & 2.
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Q: Can an Ex nA or Ex ec device be used in Zone 1?
A:
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No, typically suitable only for Zone 2.
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Q: What are the marking requirements for Ex equipment?
A:
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Must show Ex symbol, protection concept, zone, group, and temperature class (e.g., Ex d IIB T4)
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Q: How is intrinsic safety maintained in instrumentation systems?
A:
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Through the use of zener barriers or galvanic isolators that limit current, voltage, and energy.