Electrical Cable Sizing Criteria
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CONTENTS
1. General 3
2. Site Conditions 3
3. Reference Documents and Standards 3
4. Cables Technical Data 4
5. Cable Sizing 4
5.1. Continuous Current Carrying Capacity (Io) 6
5.1.1. Maximum Allowed Current Carrying Capacity (Iz) 6
5.2. Voltage Drop 7
5.3. Maximum Short Circuit Current 7
6. Annex A. Standard references for MV Cables 10
7. Annex B. Standard references for LV Cables 16
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1. General
The present specification deals with the selection criteria for the medium voltage and low voltage
cables.
The selection shall be performed considering:
Operating current condition
Voltage drop
Short circuit current condition
Type of cable installation
2. Site Conditions
Maximum Ambient Temperature 48 °C
Minimum Ambient Temperature 1 °C
Humidity 62 %
Elevation above sea level 135 m
3. Reference Documents and Standards
Electrical Design Criteria
MV Cables Technical Specification
LV and Control Cables Technical Specification
IEC 60502-1
Power cables with extruded insulation and their accessories for rated voltages from 1 kV (Um =
1.2 kV) up to 30 kV (Um = 36 kV) – Part 1: Cables for rated voltages of 1 kV (Um = 1.2 kV)
and 3 kV (Um = 3.6 kV)
IEC 60502-2
Power cables with extruded insulation and their accessories for rated voltages from 1 kV (Um =
1.2 kV) up to 30 kV (Um = 36 kV) – Part 2: Cables for rated voltages from 6 kV (Um = 7.2 kV)
up to 30kV (Um = 36 kV)
IEC 60364-5-52
Low-voltage electrical installations – Part 5-52: Selection and erection of electrical equipment –
Wiring systems
IEC 60947-2
Low-voltage switchgear and control gear – Part 2: Circuit-breakers
IEC 61200-53
Electrical installation guide – Part 53:
Selection and erection of electrical equipment – Switchgear and control gear
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IEC 60364-4-43
Low-voltage electrical installations –Part 4-43: Protection for safety – Protection against
overcurrent
4. Cables Technical Data
The cables technical data is specified at “Cable Characteristic Table”. The meaning of any
designation at “cable characteristic table” is explained below (items from (1) to (7)):
(1) Cable cross section
It specifies the number of cores forming the cable and also cross section of each single conductor
(mm2); neutral/protective conductor is considered too.
(2) Conductor material
It defines the material of the conductor (e.g. Cu, Al).
(3) Insulation material
It is the code to specify the insulation material (e.g. XLPE, EPR, and PVC).
(4) Cable rated voltage
It specifies the voltage cable (U0/U/ Um):
U0: is the rated voltage between conductor and earth or metallic screen for which the cable is
designed.
U: is the rated voltage between conductors for which the cable is designed.
Um: is the maximum value of the "highest system voltage'' for which the equipment may be
used.
(5) Resistance
It is the resistance of the conductor, in (Ohm/Km) at the insulation temperature limit.
(6) Reactance
It is the reactance of the conductor, in (Ohm/Km), at the rated frequency and according to the
type of installation.
(7) Rated current
It is the rated current “I0” of the cable (in Amperes) specified from the applicable standards,
under the installation condition and the reference ambient temperature.
5. Cable Sizing
The following items shall be considered:
a) Short circuit capacity
b) Continuous current carrying capacity
c) Voltage drops in normal condition & transient conditions.
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d) Any special operating conditions stated in electrical design criteria and/or other project
specifications
The largest size of cables as determined from a, b, c and d shall be used.
a) Short circuit capacity
Maximum short circuit current shall be considered for determining cable short circuit capacity.
The fault clearing time under short circuit conditions of power cables connected to circuit
breakers shall be calculated by the followings:
1) The backup relay operating time at maximum fault level
2) 0.05 second to cover variation of settings
3) The circuit breaker operating time
Where power cables are protected by fuses, its cut off time shall be considered.
b) Continuous current carrying capacity (I0)
Continuous current carrying capacity depends on the maximum permissible continuous
conductor temperature and various types of cable installation. When applying that temperature,
cable terminations and associated equipment shall have the ability to withstand the temperature
without damage and to dissipate the heat due to cable temperature.
c) Voltage drop
The overall voltage drop in power cables will be limited to maximum 5% at full load and will not
exceed 15% during motor starting . This voltage drop is from the main/source to the end
consumer.
The nominal system voltage, the maximum impedance of each component and the full load
current of each cable are used for voltage drop calculations.
5.1. Continuous Current Carrying Capacity (Io)
Continuous current carrying capacity can be obtained from Annex A :Table B.2 & Table B.6 of
IEC 60502-2 for MV Cables and Annex B Table B.52.2, Table B.52.3, Table B.52.4, Table
B.52.5 & Table B.52.10 & Table B.52.12 of IEC 60364-5-52 for LV Cables.
Different methods of installation for LV Cables are explained in Annex B Table B.52.1 from
IEC 60364-5-52.
5.1.1. Maximum Allowed Current Carrying Capacity (Iz)
It is maximum current that can be continuously carried by the cable at the specified installation
conditions. The maximum allowable current carrying capacity (Iz) is obtained by multiplying the
cable rated current “I0” by the total derating factor (Kt), as follows:
Iz = Kt × I0 (A)
Where:
Iz: maximum allowable current carrying capacity (A)
I0: cable rated current (A)
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Kt: total derating factor
Total derating factor for continuous current carrying capacity depends on two factors which are
calculated as below:
Kt = K1 × K2 × 0.95
Where:
K1: Ambient temperature and relevant correction factor
K2: Derating factor relevant to the type of installation
K1 which is the correction factor of cable design for an ambient temperature can be deduced as
follows:
MV Cables
The correction factors for ambient air temperatures other than 30°C and ambient ground
temperature other than 20°C are obtained from Annex A Table B.10 & Table B.11 from
IEC 60502-2.
LV Cables
The correction factors for ambient air temperatures other than 30°C and ambient ground
temperature other than 20°C are obtained from Annex B Table B.52.14 & Table B.52.15
from IEC 60364-5-52.
K2 which is the derating factor relevant to type of installation can be deduced as follows:
MV cables
The K2 for groups of more than one circuit in each phase is obtained from Annex A Table
B.22 & Table B.23 from IEC 60502-2.
LV cables
The K2 for groups of more than one circuit in each phase is obtained from Annex B Table
B.52.17, Table B.52.18, Table B.52.19, Table B.52. & Table B.52.21 from IEC 60364-5-
52.
5.2. Voltage Drop
The unitary voltage drop (DV) is obtained by the following formula:
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For an AC system
Voltage drop is expressed as a percentage (%).
For a DC system
Where:
V: Line to line voltage of the system (V)
R: Cable resistance (Ohm/Km)
X: Cable reactance (Ohm/Km)
Ø : Power factor angle
L: One-way length of conductor (Km)
I: Phase load current (A)
5.3. Maximum Short Circuit Current
For cables and insulated conductors, all current caused by a short-circuit occurring at any
point of the circuit shall be interrupted in a time not exceeding that which brings the
insulation of the conductors to the permitted limit temperature.
1) For operating times of protective devices up to 0.1s where asymmetry of the current is
important and for current-limiting devices, “K 2S 2” shall be greater than the value of the
let-through energy “I2t” quoted by the manufacturer of the protective device.
Therefore, the protective device shall be selected while let-through energy of the
protective device (I2t) is lower or equal to the withstand energy of the cable (K 2S 2):
I2t ≤ K 2S 2
Where:
I2t: is the specific let-through energy of the protective device which can be read on the curves
supplied by the manufacturer
S: is the cable cross section (mm2), in case of conductors in parallel, it is the cross section of a
single conductor
K: is a factor that depends on the cable insulating and conducting material (according to table 1)
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2) For short-circuits duration greater than 0.1 s up to 5 s, the time, in which a given short-
circuit current will raise the insulation of the conductors from the highest permissible
temperature in normal duty to the limit temperature can, as an approximation, be
calculated from the formula:
Where:
S: is the minimum cross-sectional area of the conductor (mm2)
t: is the maximum duration of the fault (Sec)
K: is a factor depending on the materials of the cable (according to table1)
I f : maximum short circuit current (A)
Table 1- Values of K for conductors according to IEC 60364-4-43, table 43A
For the duration “t” of the fault, three different values can be used to deal with different
C.B. opening times, according to the selectivity study.
In this project following “t” values in seconds are considered according to manufacture
catalogue:
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LV Cables (<1000V)
Item Descriptipn ta (Sec)
1 Fault clearance time (FCT) for MCCB and 0.1
MPCB with fixed short circuit release time
2 Fault clearance time (FCT) for ACB and 0.2
MCCB with adjustable short circuit release
time
3 Fault clearance time (FCT) for incoming line 1
from transformer
MV Cables
Item Descriptipn ta (Sec)
1 Fault clearance time (FCT) for outgoing (motor 0.25
and transformer) feeders
2 Fault clearance time (FCT) for Interconnection 0.6
feeders
3 Fault clearance time (FCT) for incoming line 1
from transformer
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6. Annex A Standard references for MV cables
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7. Annex B Standard references for MV cables
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