Under certain circumstances, unintentional series arcing, caused from damaged line cords and loose connections, can pose a serious fire and safety hazard. This work, focusing on residential 115 Vac applications, shows how continuous bursts of ignited gases can be created from overheated polyvinyl chloride (PVC) insulation created from glowing contacts with subsequent series arcing, or surface breakdown with subsequent series arcing. Also, surprisingly, these potentially hazardous fire conditions were created with currents as low as 0.9 Arms at 115 Vac (100 W lamp load). Little research is available about the interaction of glowing contacts, formed from loose or broken copper conductors in wiring (outlets, switches, line conductors, etc.), with electrical insulation. This work shows how glowing contacts and surface arcing can decompose PVC insulation, form ignitable gases, and that it is possible for the subsequent series arc to ignite, and burn insulation. Two conditions are identified that can create an overheated connection-a glowing contact and/or breakdown over a charred insulation surface. Mechanisms are discussed along with data for glowing contact voltage drop, photographs of glowing connections, and a gas chromatograph analysis of the evolved gases emitted from overheated PVC wiring. Selected high-speed video frames (1000 fps) taken from videos of the series arc and bursts of ignitable gasses along with synchronized current and voltage waveforms over a current range of 0.9 Arms to 5 Arms are presented. These findings are useful for advancing the state-of-the-art in fire protection by providing a better understanding of how electrical fires can initiate.
[1]
J. Aronstein.
Evaluation of receptacle connections and contacts
,
1993,
Proceedings of IEEE Holm Conference on Electrical Contacts.
[2]
Vytenis Babrauskas,et al.
How do electrical wiring faults lead to structure ignitions
,
2001
.
[3]
Kees van Wingerden,et al.
Gas explosion handbook
,
1997
.
[4]
M. Runde,et al.
Glowing contact areas in loose copper wire connections
,
1991,
Electrical Contacts - 1991 Proceedings of the Thirty-Seventh IEEE HOLM Conference on Electrical Contacts.
[5]
Vytenis Babrauskas,et al.
MECHANISMS AND MODES FOR IGNITION OF LOW-VOLTAGE PVC WIRES, CABLES, AND CORDS
,
2005
.