NEC 210.8.B exceptions to GFCI placement

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I reviewed the postings and did not find the exact match to my question

Would a general chemistry lab be considered an industrial establishment or industrial laboratory and would it be exempt from the requirement to place GFCI receptacles within 6' of the sink under exception #2 to 210.8.B(4) or exception 1 to 210.8.B(5).?

I always thought that the only labs where the GFCIs were required are in instruction type labs - schools and colleges, but was told recently that it is only an exception to heavy industrial production facilities.

Thanks in advance
 
What do you mean by "general chemistry lab"? Is this a school or a chemical production facility? What would happen if some electrical component that was plugged into a receptacle that was within six feet of a sink had a fault, and if the GFCI tripped it out before the circuit breaker could respond? Would that result in the leakage of a gas that could threaten the health of the people nearby? That is the kind of thing being described in exception 1 to sub paragraph (5).
 
What I mean by "general chemistry lab" is that it is a lab affiliated or located in a commercial research facility or a pharmaceutical facility. It may be a bio-hazard research lab or something similar. It does not have any heavy moving machinery that is connected to the bench-top receptacles.

I would like to avoid placing the GFCI protected receptacles in these labs based on the exception 1 to sub. par. 5. I believe your answer is that I can do that.

Thanks for the reply
 
I think you have to determine if the hazard is greater not having a gfci then it is if there were a gfci. If the experiments cannot lose power and the lose of power would cause danger to personnel then I would say not needed. I think this may be an AHJ call or they may need to locate the receptacles further from the sinks.
 
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