80% Auto-Ignition Temperature

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fifty60

Senior Member
Location
USA
I am trying to find in the code where it discusses the temperature of sheathed heaters in hazardous environments.

I know the temperature of the heaters have to limited to 80% of the AIT of the hazardous material, but is the 80% in Celsius or Fahrenheit?
 
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fifty60

Senior Member
Location
USA
80% of 100 C gives a different result than 80% of the equivalent of 100 C. The NEC would have to mean 80% of one or the other but it cannot be both...

.8 * 100 C = 80 C.

100 C = 212 F

.8 * 212 F = 169.6 F

169.6 F =76.4 C
 

ggunn

PE (Electrical), NABCEP certified
Location
Austin, TX, USA
Occupation
Consulting Electrical Engineer - Photovoltaic Systems
80% of 100 C gives a different result than 80% of the equivalent of 100 C. The NEC would have to mean 80% of one or the other but it cannot be both...

.8 * 100 C = 80 C.

100 C = 212 F

.8 * 212 F = 169.6 F

169.6 F =76.4 C
What if it means Kelvin? :D
 

Smart $

Esteemed Member
Location
Ohio
80% of 100 C gives a different result than 80% of the equivalent of 100 C. The NEC would have to mean 80% of one or the other but it cannot be both...

.8 * 100 C = 80 C.

100 C = 212 F

.8 * 212 F = 169.6 F

169.6 F =76.4 C
All references I've seen to AIT use Celsius.

FWIW, when converting to Farenheit, you also have to take into consideration the zero offset of the different scales, i.e. 0?C = 32?F... so it's actually .8 * 180 + 32 = 176?F.
 
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david luchini

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Connecticut
Occupation
Engineer
I am trying to find in the code where it discusses the temperature of sheathed heaters in hazardous environments.

I know the temperature of the heaters have to limited to 80% of the AIT of the hazardous material, but is the 80% in Celsius or Fahrenheit?

501.135(B)(1)(1) says "80% of the ignition temperature in degrees Celsius"
 

fifty60

Senior Member
Location
USA
All references I've seen to AIT use Celsius.

FWIW, when converting to Farenheit, you also have to take into consideration the zero offset of the different scales, i.e. 0?C = 32?F... so it's actually .8 * 180 + 32 = 176?F.


You first have to multiply the 180 * 9 / 5 before you add the 32.
 

Smart $

Esteemed Member
Location
Ohio
You first have to multiply the 180 * 9 / 5 before you add the 32.
I don't know where you are getting that. 180?F is the span equivalent of the range 0-100?C... i.e. the equivalent range is 32-212?F.

Conversion:

?C = (?F-32) ? 5/9
?F = ?C ? 9/5 + 32

Essentially the delta ratio of the scales is 9?F to 5?C, while the zero offset is +32?F.

To figure the equivalent of a temperature percentage in ?F based on the same percentage to 100?C...

?F = (% ? 100?C) ? 9/5 + 32

We can shorten that to...

?F = % ? (100?C ? 9/5) + 32
?F = % ? 180 + 32
 

rbalex

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Mission Viejo, CA
Occupation
Professional Electrical Engineer
I am trying to find in the code where it discusses the temperature of sheathed heaters in hazardous environments.

I know the temperature of the heaters have to limited to 80% of the AIT of the hazardous material, but is the 80% in Celsius or Fahrenheit?
If you asked this question in the Hazardous Locations forum you mike have gotten the "Code" answer a bit sooner. It's in the same Section you learned that it was 80 percent of the AIT. [501.135]
 
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