Good stuff Jim, I agree with all you said. Wish Jaref was here, bet he has some good knowledge to share on the subject, where are you Dr Evil??
Watching the elections...
I think most of the meat of it has been covered well. I'll just reiterate that it does not replace coordination, it enhances it. Coordination in and of itself is necessary to ensure that a fault is cleared at the closest possible point so that equipment is not stressed any more than necessary. The problem is, if you get a ground fault
in between two coordinated breakers, the fault is cleared only after the higher level device's setting is exceeded because it has no idea that the fault is not trying to be cleared at a lower level device. So the stress is applied at the upstream device's level, something that may subject the equipment to unnecessarily high levels of mechanical force.
ZSI is a way of changing the trip settings depending on where the fault occurs. Say for instance that you have two Switchboards, one feeding another. A feeder in SWBD1 is set to trip in 0.4 sec because it is feeding SWBD2, which has feeders set to trip in 0.3 sec., which feed breakers in downstream panelboards set to 0.2 sec. and further down at motor starters set to 0.1 sec. If the fault happens at a motor (lowest "fault zone"), the motor breaker trips first in 0.1 sec, preventing the upstream devices from having to see the mechanical stresses of that fault. But if the fault happens in between the first two SWBDs (higher fault "zone), then ZSI would lower the trip time at the SWBD1 feeder to 0.1 sec. because it did NOT see the fault at any of the SWB2 breakers or anywhere below that. Without ZSI (or if it loses communications to answer a previous question), the basic original coordination still applies, but SWBD1 would have to withstand the fault stress for 0.4 seconds; 4 times as long and a virtual eternity if the AFC is high and effectively the last ditch level you would see only if all of the downstream devices had failed to clear a fault at their level.
This paper gives a good story board for the idea. But there is no specific standard that applies, it is a "feature" of high-tech circuit breakers. That's why it does not supplant doing proper coordination, it just makes it better.
http://www2.sea.siemens.com/NR/rdon...5-750A3DACF22D/0/VLCircuitBreakerZSIGuide.pdf