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ARE CABLES MY BIGGEST FIRE RISK ?

Electric cables provide the connectivity which keeps the lights on,
air-conditioning working and the lifts running. It powers our computers, office
equipment and provides the LAN connection for computer networks, entertainment
systems, telephones, PA and communication systems. Even mobile phones need to
connect with a wireless GSM antenna, or leaky co-axial cables which are in turn
connected to the telecom network by fiber optic, or insulated copper cables.

In addition, electric cables enable all the life safety, firefighting and
security systems by connecting fire alarms, smoke and heat detectors, break
glass alarms, fireman’s telephones, EWIS and CCTV. They connect smoke extracting
fans and shutters, air pressurization fans and dampers, emergency and exit
lighting, fire sprinkler pumps, fire door closers, and so many other features of
a modern Building Management System. If the essential cable system fails during
emergency, then the connected emergency equipment fails, possibly with
devastating consequences.

Whilst we understand this, we seldom think much about cables because electric
wiring systems are mostly hidden and embedded in the construction, ceiling
spaces, riser shafts or wall cavities. Because cables are installed by many
different trades for different applications, often in polymeric conduit and
ducting systems, what is not often realized is that the many miles of cables and
many tons of plastic polymers, which make up the cable insulation system can
represent one of the biggest fixed fire loads (fuel source) in the building.
This point is certainly worth thinking more about.

Fire Spread & Flame Retardance; Electrical cables are frequently blamed by the
media and fire authorities as the cause of fires, however it is often not the
failure of the cable which starts a fire but the misuse of the cable by frayed
or damaged insulation, overloading due to incorrect or insufficient circuit
protection, short circuit or over voltage. These situations can cause high
temperatures in the cable conductors, or electrical arcing which may heat the
cable insulation and any surrounding combustible materials to start a fire.

Most common flexible cables are made from hydrocarbon (oil) based polymers.
These base polymers are not usually flame retardant and have high calorific
values, so cable manufacturers add chemicals to make them more suited to
electrical cable use. Halogens like Chlorine are particularly good additives
which help retard flame propagation, and don’t significantly impact the
dielectric properties of the polymer, so halogens are used in both cable
insulations and in cable sheaths. These halogenated polymers (example: PVC) also
have a negative side effect because in fire they will release the halogens as
halides, which are extremely toxic and when combined with the moisture in eyes,
mouth and lungs. Often standard PVC cables will also release large amounts of
acrid smoke.

Often, designers realize the dangers of fire spread, halogen & toxic gases, plus
the smoke released from cables in fire so they specify cables to have ‘Halogen
Free’, ‘Flame Retardant’ and ‘Low Smoke’ properties. For these cases, cable
manufacturers need to use other non-halogenated materials, mostly with flame
retarding fillers, like alumina-trihydrate (ATH). While effective in retarding
flame propagation, these fillers often negatively affect the polymer by reducing
dielectric performance, or affecting mechanical & water resistance. For this
reason additives like ATH are mostly used only in cable jackets. Halogen Free
Flame Retardant cables most often use a more pure polymer like Polyethylene (PE
or XLPE) or EPR for the insulation which has good electric and mechanical
properties but may not be very flame retardant.

Fire Propagation performance; Often the best flame retardant cables are
halogenated because both the insulation and outer Jacket are flame retardant,
but when we need Halogen Free cables we find it is often only the outer jacket
which is flame retardant and the inner insulation is not. This has significance
because while cables with a flame retardant outer jacket, may pass flame
retardance tests with an external flame source, the same cables when subjected
to high overload or prolonged short circuits have proved in university tests to
be highly flammable and can even start a fire. This effect is known and was
published by Olex Cables Australia at the 8th International Conference on
Insulated Power Cables - Jicable’11 – 19 – 23 June 2011, Versailles – France.
What this means is your flame retardant cables may not be flame retardant under
uncleared short circuit or overload conditions!

In Australia, unlike any other country, AS/NZS3008.1.1:2017 has tables allowing
some cable designs to operate at conductor temperatures to 110°C. Whilst
technically possible for the cables, what has not been fully considered by
Australian Standards is the intrinsic change this cable operating temperature
may have on the cable’s flammability. Where cables are required to be flame
retardant to Australian Standard test method AS/NZS60332-3, it is concerning
these tests are not conducted on cable samples preconditioned to the operating
temperature, rather commencing at room temperature. It is well known the hotter
a material is the more easily it will burn, so designers and users of cables
which claim to meet these standards may be surprised to learn their cables might
not be flame retardant at all, when installed and used at their rated operating
temperature.

In America many building standards do not require halogen free cables. Certainly
this is not because Americans are not wisely informed of the dangers, rather the
approach taken is that: “It is better to have highly flame retardant cables
which do not propagate fire, than minimally flame retardant cables which may
spread or contribute to a fire” (a small fire with some halogens may be better
than a large fire without halogens).

Europe, UK, Australia and many countries around the world have a different
approach: Halogen Free and Flame Retardant. Whilst this is an admirable
approach, the reality is rather different: In asking for both flame retardant
and halogen free properties, cable manufacturers often compromise between high
flame retardance with halogens, or reduced flame retardance without halogens.

Enclosing cables in steel conduit will reduce flame propagation at the point of
fire, but hydrocarbon based combustion gasses and smoke from the decomposing
polymers will propagate along the inside of conduits to switchboards,
distribution boards and junction boxes in other parts of the building where any
spark such as the opening or closing of circuit breakers, or contactors is
likely to ignite the combustible gasses leading to explosion and spreading of
the fire and smoke to other locations. Even a small cable fire creates a lot of
smoke

The primary importance of fire load; To provide cables which are halogen free,
cable makers most often choose polymers like polyethylene (PE & XLPE) because it
is easy to process and cheap, however although polyethylene is halogen free it
has a naturally high fire load. The Heat Release Rate and volatility in air for
these materials will differ, but the fuel added to a fire per kg and the
consequential volume of heat generated and oxygen consumed is relative.

When considering fire safety we must first understand the most important
factors. Fire experts tell us most fire related deaths in buildings are caused
by smoke inhalation, temperature rise, and oxygen depletion or by trauma caused
by jumping in trying to escape these effects. So let’s take a look at these
factors as they relate to the electrical cable system:

Smoke; The first and most important aspect of smoke is how much smoke? Typically
the larger the fire the more smoke is generated, so anything we can do to reduce
the spread of fire will also correspondingly reduce the amount of smoke. Highly
flame retardant cables with a high oxygen index will help here because they may
limit the fire spread.

Smoke will contain particulates of carbon, ash and other solids, liquids and
gasses, many are toxic and combustible. In particular, fires in confined areas
like buildings, tunnels and underground environments cause oxygen levels to drop
near the fire source, and this contributes to incomplete burning and smoldering,
which can produce increased amounts of smoke and toxic by-products including CO
(Carbon Monoxide). As we know the presence of halogenated materials will release
toxic halides like Hydrogen Chloride, together with many other toxic and
flammable gasses in the smoke.

For this reason common British, IEC and Australian (AS/NZS61034) smoke tests
conducted by burning cable samples in large 3 meter³ chambers with plenty of air
can provide very misleading smoke figures because complete burning in flame
often release far less smoke than partial incomplete burning or smoldering,
which is likely in practice (in America NFPA 130 calls for smoke tests in both
flaming and non-flaming modes). Simply specifying low smoke cables to common
British, IEC and Australian standards, then thinking this will provide a low
smoke environment during a real fire may give comfort to the specifiers, but
unfortunately in practice be of little help for the people actually involved.

Material; It is concerning that the UK, Europe, Australia and other countries
often adopt the concept of halogen free cables without fully addressing the
subject of toxicity. Halogens released during combustion are extremely toxic,
but so too is carbon monoxide and this is not a halogen gas. It is common for
specifications to call for halogen free cables and because of this, encourage
the use of Polyethylene, because it is halogen free. Burning Polyethylene will
generate almost 3 times more heat than an equivalent PVC cable. This means that
burning polyethylene will not only generate almost 3 times more heat, but also
consume almost 3 times more oxygen and can produce large amounts of Carbon
Monoxide, especially with partial or incomplete burning. Given that it is carbon
monoxide, which is statistically responsible for most toxicity deaths in fires
this situation is at best alarming. (Carbon Monoxide is a colorless and odorless
toxic gas which inhibits the blood hemoglobin from absorbing oxygen. Prolonged
exposure results in asphyxiation).

Certainly this volume of heat will accelerate the burning of other adjacent
materials and may help spread the fire in a building but importantly, in order
to generate the heat energy, oxygen needs to be consumed. The higher the heat of
combustion (MJ/Kg) the more oxygen is needed, so by choosing insulations (even
if Halogen Free) with high fuel elements is adding significantly to at least
four of the primary dangers of fire: Temperature rise, Oxygen depletion, Toxic
gas emission, and Flame spread.

Conclusion – Fire Load; The popularity of “Halogen Free” properties while
ignoring the other toxic elements of fire is a clear admission we do not
understand the subject well, nor can we easily define the dangers of combined
toxic elements, or human physiological response to them. It is important
however, that we do not continue to design with only half an understanding of
the problem. While no perfect solution exists for organic based electric cables,
we can certainly minimize these critically important effects of fire risk:

Essential Life Safety and Fire Fighting equipment circuits; Unlike other cables,
fire resistant cables have to work even when directly exposed the fire to keep
essential equipment working: Fire alarms, emergency lighting, EWIS, fire
sprinkler pumps, fireman’s lift sub-main, smoke extraction fans, smoke dampers
and shutters, stair pressurization fans, emergency generator circuits etc..

With the release of AS/NZS3013:2005, Australia has perhaps a better
certification regime than Europe or UK for fire rated wiring systems, (The
American UL2196 is perhaps the world’s best fire resistance protocol for wiring
systems, as it requires fire and water testing in both horizontal and vertical
configurations). However, any wiring system (cable or bus duct) required to
operate in fire must not only account for the electrical integrity of the
circuit in order to ensure reliable function of the life safety and firefighting
equipment connected, but also for the effects of fire on voltage drop, reduced
conductor conductivity due to increased conductor resistance at fire
temperatures and the additional ohmic heating generated by carrying the required
load under these conditions. Unfortunately our current standards do not. What
this means is that it is entirely possible many essential wiring systems
installed today and the essential equipment connected, can fail if subjected to
serious fire events due to fire induced increased voltage drop, or by failure of
conductors to carry the required current at fire temperatures.

Research by Universities, Institutions and Authorities in Australia and around
the world have identified that for modern above ground cellulosic buildings, the
use of lightweight thermoplastic building materials, synthetic foams and
fabrics, along with synthetic materials and plastic contents have significantly
increased fire loads, resulting in time temperature fire profiles well above
above the original parameters of the existing, early 1900’s test protocol
ISO834-1 (AS/NZS1530pt4) as mandated by the Australian NCC. Underground
environments are also known to exhibit very different fire profiles, to those in
above ground cellulosic environments. Specifically in confined underground
public areas like road and rail tunnels, underground shopping centers, car parks
etc. fire temperatures can exhibit a very fast rise time and reach temperatures
well above those in above ground buildings. The UK British Standard BS8519:2010
it clearly identifies underground public areas such as car parks as “Areas of
Special Risk”. In these environments more stringent test protocols for fire
resistance including for electric cables systems may need to be specified by
designers.

It should be noted that national standards and building regulations are drafted
as minimum general requirements, and that should a building, project or
environment be known to have more demanding emergency conditions or fire risk
than considered in the standards, then it may be the responsibility of the
professional engineer, contractors and project owners to require additional
performances.

For Metros Road and Rail Tunnels, Hospitals, Health care facilities, underground
public environments like our popular mega shopping precincts, very high rise,
theaters, public halls, government buildings, airports etc. this is particularly
important. Evacuation of these public environments with children, aged and
disabled people can be very slow during emergencies.

For many power, control, communication and data circuits, there is one
technology available for many the issues raised in this paper. It is a solution
which is frequently used in demanding public buildings and has been employed
reliably for over 80 years. MICC cable technology provides a comprehensive
solution to all the problems associated with the fire safety concerns of modern
flexible organic polymer cables.

The copper jacket, magnesium oxide insulation and copper conductors of Mineral
Insulated Copper Clad Cables (MICC) ensure the cable is effectively fire proof.
MICC cables have no organic content so simply cannot propagate flame or generate
any smoke. The zero fuel-load of MICC cables ensures no heat is added to the
fire and no oxygen is consumed. As MICC cables are inorganic, they cannot
generate any halogen or toxic gasses at all including Carbon Monoxide.

MICC cables meet all of the current and building fire resistance performance
standards in Australia and are seeing a significant resurgence in Australia and
overseas.

Many engineers have previously considered MICC cable technology to be “old
school” but with new research into the real fire performances of many polymer
based wiring systems, MICC cable systems represent a viable and holistic
solution, and they may not be the perfect answer, however the current status-quo
is also not.


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