Isolation of the neutral conductor: Difference between revisions
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(see {{FigRef| | (see {{FigRef|G68}}) | ||
It is considered to be the good practice that every circuit be provided with the means for its isolation. | It is considered to be the good practice that every circuit be provided with the means for its isolation. | ||
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{{TableEnd|Tab1222| | {{TableEnd|Tab1222|G68|The various situations in which the neutral conductor may appear | ||
|a| Authorized for TT or TN-S systems if a RCD is installed at the origin of the circuit or upstream of it, and if no artificial neutral is distributed downstream of its location | |a| Authorized for TT or TN-S systems if a RCD is installed at the origin of the circuit or upstream of it, and if no artificial neutral is distributed downstream of its location | ||
|b| The neutral overcurrent protection is not necessary: | |b| The neutral overcurrent protection is not necessary: |
Revision as of 02:53, 14 May 2018
(see Fig. G68)
It is considered to be the good practice that every circuit be provided with the means for its isolation.
TT | TN-C | TN-S | IT | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Single-phase
(Phase-Neutral) |
[b] | |||
Single-phase
(Phase-Phase) |
[a] | [a] | ||
Three-phase four wires
Sn ≥ Sph |
[c] | [b] | ||
Three-phase four wires Sn < Sph | [b] |
[a] Authorized for TT or TN-S systems if a RCD is installed at the origin of the circuit or upstream of it, and if no artificial neutral is distributed downstream of its location
[b] The neutral overcurrent protection is not necessary:
- If the neutral conductor is protected against short-circuits by a device placed upstream, or,
- If the circuit is protected by a RCD which sensitivity is less than 15% of the neutral admissible current.
[c] In some coutries the rules applied for TN-S are the same than the rules for TN-C