Section 1.10.5 – EFJohnson SMARTZONE 7780 User Manual

Page 11

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GENERAL INFORMATION

1-5

November 1999

Part No. 001-7780-500

tion. When electrical equipment is given this rating, the
equipment is considered incapable of releasing suffi-
cient electrical and thermal energy under normal oper-
ation or specified fault conditions per the testing
standard to cause ignition of a specific flammable or
combustible atmosphere in its most easily ignited con-
centration. In other words, this transceiver should not
cause a fire or explosion when used in certain flamma-
ble atmospheres.

Fault - A defect or electrical breakdown of any compo-
nent, spacing, or insulation which alone or in combina-
tion with other faults may adversely affect the electrical
or thermal characteristics of the intrinsically safe circuit
(for example, a shorted transistor).

1.10.3 POSSIBLE IGNITION SOURCES

When a transceiver is checked by Factory

Mutual, possible sources of ignition are checked.
These sources may be electrical (spark) or thermal
(heat). The following could be sources of spark
ignition:

Discharge of a capacitive circuit by a fault such as a
short circuit.

Interruption of an inductive circuit.

Intermittent making or breaking of a resistive
circuit.

Hot-wire fusing.

The following could be sources of thermal

ignition:

Heating of a small-gauge wire or PC board trace.

High surface temperature of components.

1.10.4 INTRINSICALLY SAFE AND

NONINCENDIVE RATINGS

This transceiver is rated intrinsically safe for

some types of hazards and nonincendive for other
types of hazards. An intrinsically safe rating applies to
operation in Division 1 areas, and a nonincendive
rating applies to operation in Division 2 areas (see
next section). The difference between these ratings is
as follows:

The intrinsically safe rating is a higher rating

because more severe conditions must be met. To be
approved for this rating, the transceiver must not cause

ignition of a particular atmosphere if two of the faults
specified in the testing procedure occur. In other
words, it must be able to withstand two simultaneous
unrelated breakdowns without causing ignition. To
receive a nonincendive rating, the transceiver needs to
withstand only a single fault without causing ignition
of a particular atmosphere.

1.10.5 CLASSIFICATION OF HAZARDOUS

AREAS AND ATMOSPHERES

Introduction

This transceiver has been submitted for approval

to operate in the following hazardous atmospheres and
areas. Contact your sales representative or refer to the
label on the back of the transceiver to determine the
specific atmospheres and areas for which approval was
obtained.

Intrinsically Safe - Class I, II, and III, Division 1,
Groups C, D, E, F, and G.

Nonincendive - Class I, Division 2, Groups A, B, C,
and D.

Temperature Code - T3C

The meanings of these Class, Division, and

Group designations are as follows.

Atmosphere Classification (Class/Group)

For the purposes of testing and approval, various

atmospheric mixtures have been grouped on the basis
of their hazardous characteristics. Equipment is
approved for a class of material and also for the
specific gas, vapor, or dust in that class. Class I mate-
rials include gases and vapors, and Class II materials
include combustible dusts. The various classes and
some specific groups of gases in each are shown in
Table 1-2.

Area Classification (Division)

Areas are either Division 1, 2, or 3 as shown in

Table 1-3. Since a Division 1 area is considered the
most hazardous, a transceiver approved for a specific
Division 1 area can also be used in the same Division
2 Class/Group.

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