Fire Survival Cable: Understanding of Lab Scale to
Transcription
Fire Survival Cable: Understanding of Lab Scale to
FIRE SURVIVAL CABLE: UNDERSTANDING OF LAB SCALE TO MANUFACTURING SCALE CABLE VALIDATION Sathish kumar Ranganathan, Tim Waters, Jon Malinoski, Srinivas Siripurapu General Cable Indianapolis Technology Center, Indianapolis, IN Aparna M.Joshi, Ninad M.Joshi; K. D. Joshi Rubber Industries Pvt. Ltd., Pune, India Abstract In order to successfully develop fire survival cable products it is important to have a good understanding of the relationship between lab scale material development testing and production-scale cable capability. Research and development work on fire survival cables has been active for more than a decade and today many commercial products exist in the market for these applications. However each fire survival cable design, application type and testing protocol is designed to be different to meet specific regional standards and customer requirements. In this work, we have demonstrated lab scale understanding of ceramic formation in silicone compounds and translated to large scale IEC 6033121 fire survival cable test validation, while also meeting other electrical, mechanical and heat ageing requirements. Introduction Fire survival cables are designed to protect people and properties in many critical safety applications such as security alarms, emergency lights, communication systems [1] in in locations such as oil and gas infrastructure, hospitals, and commercial buildings [2]. These cables are an important and growing market opportunity within the wire cable industry. For fire resistant cables, customer requirements, application type, and standards dictate the final cable design and material type used in cable construction. These cable design and test standards are region specific; hence it is required to meet a specific fire test method, electrical, mechanical and physical test requirements. There are different types of cable designs being used for fire survival cable applications such as MC-HL, RHW, RHH and others. Each cable type may be rated for different electrical properties like UL 44 wet or dry rating and cable fire rating IEC 60331-21, and UL 2196. Developing appropriate insulation and jacket compounds to pass these cable requirements is a challenging task, since there are many complex material parameters such as ceramic type, hardness of the char, dimensional change, smoke release and in-cable use of mica tape in cable [3] design that must be considered. The fire survival test is designed to verify that the cable is capable of performing in an emergency condition and meets the specific test standard. However in reality most of these cables will never experience an emergency situation. Hence while designing insulation and jacket compounds, cable application properties need to be considered. Balancing cable application and emergency condition requirements is a particular challenge for wire and cable materials development, in particular for the polymeric insulation which must convert to a ceramic form in order to pass a fire survival cable test. For more than a decade silicone resins have been used as the basis for ceramifiable silicone compounds, since it has advantage of forming silica after burning. There are several different types of silicone resins used in cable applications with different curing mechanisms such as free radical, addition and condensation. Though silicone-based compounds provide excellent flexibility, long term heat ageing resistance is often a challenge for these materials. A critical determinant for ceramic formation is the type of filler used in the compound. There are many different types of filler approaches 1 SPE ANTEC™ Indianapolis 2016 / 55 currently used in industry such as glass frit, Mica [4], calcium carbonate [5], montmorillonites [6], APP [7] in order to achieve ceramic char formation. However each mechanism has its own advantages and disadvantages when considering final cable properties including wet electrical insulation, ceramic formation and compound melt process ability. In this work we have demonstrated a method to screen ceramic formation on a lab scale and then correlate these results to manufacturing scale fire survival cable testing. Experimental: Lab Scale Development Polymeric materials and fillers are used in these experiments are SILASTIC® NPC-40 Silicone rubber from Dow Corning; Teco-sil® Fused silica from C-E Minerals; glass frit powders are used from Furtura, ABX and KATI; Vinyl silane from Evonik chemicals; Mica from LKab Minerals, Zinc Borate from Chemtura and Aluminum Trihydroxide from Huber. The experimental insulation compounds were mixed in roll mill at 80°C for 10 minutes and 70 mil plaques were molded under pressure at 150C for 20 minutes to measure mechanical and ceramic properties. Ceramification properties were screened by the following test method: Two inch square, 70mil plaque dimensions and weight were measured before and after the furnace test, which is performed by hanging the samples in an 800°C furnace for 2 hours. The changes in dimension are reported as percentage change and weight retention or char formation is reported as char content percentage. The formulation design details and ceramification test results are disclosed in Table -1 and Figure - 2. The composition with fused silica and mica with other ingredients but not with glass frit powder forms a ceramic, however it does not gives the sufficient strength after furnace test to form ceramic selfsupport. Addition of different types of glass frit powders helped to increase the char strength and ceramic char to have self-support after the furnace test. The other aspect is changes in dimensions were measured and calculated the average percentage in dimensions before and after furnace test. Sample with Glass frit KATI shows the lowest average dimensional change after ceramification test. The insulation compound which has the limited dimensional changes or low expansion expected to have less stresses between other layers in the cable and will low possibility of cracking while fire survival test. Manufacturing Scale Validation Based on the lab-scale screening results and learnings, the best performing ceramifiable insulation compound was scaled up in manufacturing plant for cable construction and testing. 18AWG and 45 mil thickness insulation wires were made using a continuous vulcanization process and were subsequently braided with glass tape. The braided insulation core was then used for further cable construction which includes application of fillers, binder tape, aluminum armor and Jacket as disclosed in Figure-1. The manufactured cable was validated for IEC-60331-21 fire survival test protocol and other insulation performance requirements as per EM60 short term electrical test method and mechanical and heat ageing properties were tested as per UL 1309 protocol. The results are reported in Table.2. The ceramifiable insulation compound meets the short term electrical requirements and long term heat ageing requirements. Fig-1: Fire survival MC-HL cable design 2 SPE ANTEC™ Indianapolis 2016 / 56 IEC 60331-21 Fire Survival Test on MC-HL cable The completed MC-HL cable was exposed to the circuit integrity fire survival test as per IEC60331-21 procedures. Initially the cable is conditioned at least 16 h at 20 ± 10 ºC and placed in the test fixture as shown in Fig- 3a. The cable was charged with 600V electrical current before initiating the flame. Once flame is applied on the cable (Fig.3b), the circuit integrity is monitored. The cable is expected to pass the requirements for at least 90 minutes time period and 15minutes continue to energize till flame has been extinguished. If the cable is unable to maintain circuit integrity it is considered a failure per the IEC 60331-21 fire survival test. This test is designed on the assumption that in a real life fire emergency situation, these cables need to remain in operating condition in order to power emergency lights and systems and improve overall fire survivability. Figures 3c, 3d, and 3e show passing results of the IEC 60331-21 fire survival test after 180 minutes exposure to 750-800°C flame. Summary and Path forward Understanding ceramic formation and dimensional changes is an important factor in order to pass large scale fire survival cable validation testing. Silicone based ceramifiable compounds can be designed to meet the short term electrical and long term heat ageing requirements and pass the IEC 60331-21 fire survival test requirements. However, several other limitations need to be considered while using silicone based ceramifiable insulation compounds to manufacture fire survival cable. Though silicone based compounds provide excellent ceramic forming properties, manufacturing scale handling of silicone material require specific considerations such as method of feeding compound to the extruder and extruder screw type. In addition, silicone compounds typically are not capable of meeting long term wet electrical insulation property as per UL 44 which is essential for UL 2196 fire survival test certification in North America. Further research work is in progress to address the above mentioned challenges by using silicone blends, copolymers and other olefin resins. Acknowledgements Authors would like to share their credits, thanks and acknowledgements to General Cable Indianapolis Technology Center Technicians & Process Team, Willimantic lab, Engineering and Manufacturing Team, General Cable Manlleu Spain test lab for their contribution, dedication and support to this project. References 1. Ceramifiable Composition for Power and/or Telecommunications cables; Martinez Agea Juan De Dios, Barbeta Estrada Javier, Calveras Ibanez Daniel, Garcia Lopez David, Poveda Bernal Jesus and Alonso Sastre Carlos WO2013093140 (A1) 2. Staszewski, Zygmunt; Protecting life safety circuits in high rise buildings, Electrical Construction and Maintenance, Jul, 1, 1995 Thermal stability and flammability of silicone polymer composites, Hanu, L.G.; Simon, G.P.; Cheng, Y.-B.; Polymer Degradation & Stability, 2006, Vol.91 (6), p.1373-1380 3. Testing of the fire-proof functionality of cable insulation under fire conditions via insulation resistance measurements; Polansky, R; Polanska, M Engineering Failure Analysis, 2015 Nov, Vol.57, pp.334-349 4. Preferential orientation of muscovite in ceramifiable silicone composites; L.G. Hanu, G.P. Simon, Y.B. Cheng∗; School of Physics and Materials Engineering, Monash University, Clayton, Vic. 3800, Australia ( Mica) Materials Science and Engineering A 398, 2005, p.180–187 5. An experimental design approach in formulating a ceramifiable EVA/PDMS composite coating for electric cable insulation; E.E. Ferg*, S.P. Hlangothi and S. Bambalaza; Polymer composites, 24 JUN 2015. 3 SPE ANTEC™ Indianapolis 2016 / 57 6. Influence of surface-modified montmorillonites on properties of silicone rubber-based ceramifiable composites; Anyszka, R. ; Bieliński, D. ; Pędzich, Z.Szumera, M. Journal of Thermal Analysis and Calorimetry, 2015, Vol.119(1), pp.111-121 7. Ceramifying composition for fire protection; Graeme Alexander, Yi-Bing Cheng, Robert Paul Burford, Robert Shanks, Jaleh Mansouri, Kenneth Willis Barber, Pulahinge Don Dayananda Rodrigo, Christopher Preston Olex Australia Pty Ltd; US8409479B2 Part-A: Lab Scale Testing Table-1: Ceramifiable Insulation Compound Ingredients T1 phr 100 T2 phr 100 25 T3 phr 100 T4 phr 100 NPC 40 - Silicone Glass Frit Powder ABX Glass Frit Powder Futura Glass Frit Powder KIAT Fused Silica Vinyl Silane Mica Zinc Borate Antimony oxide Peroxide Total 50 2 20 10 10 0.6 192.6 50 2 20 10 10 0.6 217.6 50 2 20 10 10 0.6 217.6 25 50 2 20 10 10 0.6 217.6 Properties after furnace test Char content % Ceramic formation Length % Width % Thickness % Average change % T1 47 Weak N.T. N.T. N.T. N.T. T2 63 Hard -4.73 7.97 20.2 7.81 T3 65 Hard -2.57 6.2 12.1 5.24 T4 64 Hard -1.2 2.64 13.1 4.85 25 4 SPE ANTEC™ Indianapolis 2016 / 58 Tested on Extruded Wires Cable Requirements Units Ceramifiable Compound Electrical Properties ( UL 44- EM 60) Dielectric constant 1 day <6 4.8 Dielectric constant 1 to 14 days < 10 % 1% Dielectric constant 7 to 14 days < 3% 1.02% 14 days 1 0.64 4000 6093 stability factor after ( 90 Deg. C) Insulation resistance IRK, Ohmsmeter/1000 Ft. ( 15 Deg.C) Mechanical Data ( Un-aged) Tensile strength PSI 800 1315 Elongation % 250 361 Tensile strength % 65 98 Elongation % 50 80.5 Heat Ageing Retention, (158C @ 168 hours) Heat Ageing Retention (108C @ 500 hours) Tensile strength % 65 Fig.2: Lab furnace ceramifiable Elongation % test (800C for502 hours) IEC 6033-21 test at 750 Deg.C 90 minutes. Circuit integrity 94.1 76.4 Pass Part-B: Manufacturing Scale Cable Validation Table-2: Tested on 18AWG Copper wire and 45mil ceramifiable insulation compound 5 SPE ANTEC™ Indianapolis 2016 / 59 Table-3: IEC 60331-21 Test Condition IEC60331-21Test Conditions Units Flame application time 90 Minutes Flame temperature 750 ≤ X ≤ 800 ºC Test voltage (AC 50 Hz) 600 V Ambient temperature 5 ≤ X ≤ 40 ºC Cooling period ≥ 15 Minutes Requirements Survival time X ≥ 120 Minutes Test observation Survival time 180 Minutes Fig. 3: IEC 60331-21 Cable Test: 3.a) Cable in test set-up before starting the test; 3.b) Test is in progress; 3.c) Before end of the test; 3.d) Electrical- Circuit integrity monitoring at 180 minutes; 3.e) Tested cable after cooling 6 SPE ANTEC™ Indianapolis 2016 / 60