Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Types of Overcurrent
The three major categories or types of overcurrent are overload, short-circuit, and
ground-fault.
Overload Overcurrent
Overload overcurrent is self-defining: Any current in excess of rated-load current
is, in effect, an overload. An overload occurs when an electrical circuit, whether by
the original design of a new circuit or by modification of an existing circuit, is
required to convey load current in excess of the rated-load ampacity of the circuit
conductors.
For example, a 20-amp branch circuit is modified with an additional lamp, which
increases the load current to 22 amps: this would be a circuit overload.
Overload conditions can occur at the service, feeder, or branch-circuit level of a
building's electrical-power distribution system.
An electrical overload overcurrent also occurs when a motor is mechanically
overloaded. This may be caused by excess friction within its internal bearing
surfaces, excess heat (due to high ambient temperature or another failure), or by
the binding or some other mechanical overload in the utilization equipment it
drives. Overload is a controlled overcurrent situation, normally of low magnitude.
Short-Circuit Overcurrent
Short-circuit currents (as well as ground-fault currents, which we'll touch on next)
are high-magnitude fault overcurrents that, in effect, place a low resistance in
parallel with the impedance of the connected load(s). Short-circuit overcurrent
normally involves an accidental cross-connection of at least two circuit
conductors (supply and return). This places a short-circuit across the supply-
transformer winding.
Figures 1 and 2 represent the more common transformer supplies to a structure.
Figure 1 is the drawing of a single-phase AC, 3-wire, 120/240-volt supply to a
building such as a home or small industrial facility). A single primary winding in
the transformer supplies (by induction) two 120-volt windings wired in series in
the secondary. A utilization-equipment load will operate at 240 volts when
connected between the two ends of the two series-connected 120-volt windings.
A utilization-equipment load will operate at 120 volts when connected between
either end of the two series-connected 120-volt windings and the third wire
shared by the two windings (see Figure 1).
Figure 1. Voltage relationships of the three supply lines from the secondary of a single-phase AC
residential service power transformer
A three-phase AC electrical power distribution system, as shown in Figure 2, will
normally have a higher value of short-circuit overcurrent because the short will
normally involve more than one single-phase AC transformer winding.
Figure 2. Voltage relationships of the four supply lines from the secondary of a three-phase AC
commercial or industrial service power transformer
Ground-Fault Overcurrent
Ground-fault overcurrent is also a short-circuit condition that normally affects
only one of the circuit conductors and the grounded metal raceway or electrical
distribution or utilization equipment enclosure.
Ground-fault overcurrent can occur only if the electrical power distribution
system of the building or structure is referenced to earth ground. “Reference
grounding” requires the common connection of one end of one or more of the
single-phase AC transformer windings (wye transformer configuration) to a
grounding-electrode system, creating both grounded and ungrounded
circuit/supply conductors.
The magnitude of ground-fault overcurrent is normally less than the magnitude
of short-circuit overcurrent available from the same transformer. The short circuit
can be across two or more transformer single-phase AC windings. The ground-
fault overcurrent normally affects only one single-phase AC winding in the
transformer supplying power to the faulted condition.
Both short-circuit and ground-fault currents are high-magnitude overcurrents
caused by an accidental low-resistance parallel connection to the connected load
resistance. Without some form of overcurrent protection device installed in series
with the circuit conductors, the only limit of the fault overcurrent is the conductor
resistance and the amount of power available from the transformer.
Overcurrent Protection
As shown in Figure 3, full overcurrent protection for the conductors and the
connected load can only be provided by a fuse or circuit breaker installed at the
point where the circuit originates (or where it receives its supply).
If an OCPD is located downstream from the supply, the overcurrent protection is
technically subdivided with short-circuit, ground-fault protection located
upstream, as well as separate overload protection located downstream. The fuses
or circuit breakers located downstream provide full overcurrent protection for any
circuits or equipment located on their load side while providing only overload
protection for their line- or supply-side circuit.
The rated ampacity of the conductors, the full-load current rating of the
connected load, and the size or load-rating of the OCPD are interrelated. The full-
load current rating of the connected load dictates the size (by rated ampacity) of
the supply conductors and the rating or setting of the OCPD.
By the same token, the rating or setting of the OCPD and the rated ampacity of
the circuit conductors dictate the maximum full-load current that can be supplied
from the service, feeder, or branch circuit. Any current magnitude that is greater
than the rated ampacity of the conveying wires or the rated-load current of the
electrical utilization equipment—such as light fixtures, motors, or transformers—
is described as an overcurrent.
The primary purpose of a circuit overcurrent protection device (a fuse, a circuit
breaker, or some other type of current-limiting device) is to limit the temperature
of the circuit conductors to a value that will not damage the conductors or their
insulation. This is achieved by limiting the amount (value) of current the
conductors are required to convey. Protecting the circuit conductors against
overheating by limiting the amount of current the conductors are required to
convey inherently protects the supplied electrical distribution and utilization
equipment (the connected load) from the effects of overcurrent.
I hope that this article has helped you achieve a better understanding of
overcurrent and overcurrent protection devices. If you'd like to know more about
a specific topic relating to overcurrent, please share your thoughts in the
comments section below.