MD84
Senior Member
- Location
- Stow, Ohio, USA
The premise of a arc fault occurring is that even if it starts as a line to ground fault it will escalate into a 3 phase fault very rapidly especially in lower voltage systems where the gap between conductors is small and the incident is most likely to happen in an enclosure. That is why arc flash is analyzed as a 3 phase fault. Arcing current depends primarily on available fault current.
Now if you are talking about a high resistance system ground, then the amount of ground fault current will be limited. But again the system is analyzed as a 3 phase fault for arc flash.
Remember that the assumption is that the fault will escalate to 3 phase. This is whether the person dropped a tool on a bus or went line to ground with it or something else happened such as a breaker racking operation failing. The plasma from this single line to ground will envelop the other phases making it a 3 phase event.
Comments like the one above are what make this forum great. Very good information here.