2. Understanding Hazardous Areas and Intrinsic Safety


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Categories : Intrinsic Safety

Why Safety Barriers Exist in Industrial Automation

Introduction

Many automation technicians encounter safety barriers, NAMUR sensors, intrinsically safe circuits, and hazardous area classifications throughout their careers. However, many people learn how to wire these devices without fully understanding why they are required.

Before understanding isolated barriers, it is important to understand the problem they are designed to solve.

The purpose of intrinsic safety is simple:

Prevent electrical equipment from becoming an ignition source in an explosive atmosphere.

This article explains hazardous areas, ignition risks, intrinsic safety concepts, and how safety barriers protect people, equipment, and facilities.


What Is a Hazardous Area?

A hazardous area is a location where flammable materials may be present in sufficient quantities to create an explosion risk.

Examples include:

  • Oil and gas facilities
  • Chemical plants
  • Fuel storage terminals
  • Pharmaceutical plants
  • Grain silos
  • Food processing facilities
  • Paint manufacturing facilities
  • Ethanol plants

In these environments, dangerous materials may exist as:

  • Gas
  • Vapor
  • Mist
  • Dust

When mixed with oxygen and exposed to an ignition source, an explosion can occur.


The Fire Triangle

Every explosion requires three elements:

          OXYGEN



FUEL ◄──────► IGNITION

Remove any one of these elements and combustion cannot occur.

Examples:

Fuel
  • Methane
  • Hydrogen
  • Propane
  • Gasoline vapors
  • Grain dust
  • Sugar dust
Oxygen

Normally present in air.

Ignition Source

Can be:

  • Electrical spark
  • Hot surface
  • Static electricity
  • Relay contact
  • Motor brush
  • Short circuit

Why Electrical Systems Can Be Dangerous

A normal PLC input card may operate at:

24 VDC

A relay output may switch:

120 VAC
240 VAC

A short circuit, loose connection, or switching contact can generate:

Spark
Arc
Heat

In a hazardous atmosphere, that may be enough to trigger an explosion.


Real Industrial Example

Imagine a level switch installed on a solvent storage tank.

Storage Tank


Level Switch


PLC

Without protection:

  • Wire short circuit
  • Terminal looseness
  • Electrical fault

may create a spark near flammable vapors.

The result could be catastrophic.


Area Classification

Industries classify locations according to risk.

North America

Uses:

  • Class
  • Division

Example:

Class I Division 1

Meaning:

  • Class I = Gas/Vapor
  • Division 1 = Hazard present under normal operation

Europe and International Standards

Uses:

  • Zones

Example:

Zone 0
Zone 1
Zone 2

Hazardous Area Zones

Zone 0

Most dangerous.

Explosive atmosphere exists continuously.

Examples:

  • Inside fuel tanks
  • Inside chemical vessels

Zone 1

Hazard may exist during normal operation.

Examples:

  • Around tank vents
  • Around process equipment

Zone 2

Hazard exists only under abnormal conditions.

Examples:

  • Areas surrounding Zone 1 equipment

The Challenge

Automation systems need information from hazardous areas.

Examples:

Pressure
Temperature
Flow
Level
Position

Sensors must communicate with:

PLC
DCS
SCADA

The question becomes:

How can we safely connect electronics to an explosive environment?


Intrinsic Safety: The Solution

Intrinsic Safety (IS) is one of the most widely used protection methods.

Instead of containing an explosion, it prevents one from occurring.

The principle is simple:

Limit Voltage
Limit Current
Limit Power

to a level incapable of ignition.

Pepperl+Fuchs describes isolated barriers as devices that provide current, voltage, and power limitation while maintaining isolation between the field circuit and the control system.


What Does “Intrinsically Safe” Mean?

An intrinsically safe circuit is designed so that:

Normal Operation
+
Single Fault
+
Worst Case Fault

still cannot generate enough energy to ignite the atmosphere.

That is the key concept.

The circuit remains safe even during failures.


How Safety Barriers Help

A barrier sits between:

Hazardous Area


Safety Barrier


PLC

The barrier continuously limits:

  • Voltage
  • Current
  • Power

before energy reaches the hazardous area.


Understanding Ex Ratings

You will often see markings like:

Ex ia
Ex ib

Ex

Means:

Explosion Protection

Ex ia

Highest level of intrinsic safety.

Safe with:

Two simultaneous faults

Typically approved for:

Zone 0
Zone 1
Zone 2

Ex ib

Safe with:

One fault

Typically approved for:

Zone 1
Zone 2

Intrinsic Safety vs Explosion-Proof

Many technicians confuse these concepts.

Intrinsic Safety

Prevents ignition.

Low Energy
No Ignition

Uses:

  • Barriers
  • NAMUR sensors
  • Low-power circuits

Explosion-Proof

Allows an explosion to occur inside an enclosure.

The enclosure contains the explosion.

Examples:

  • Explosion-proof motors
  • Explosion-proof junction boxes
  • Explosion-proof lighting

Why Intrinsic Safety Is Popular

Advantages include:

Easier Maintenance

Technicians can often troubleshoot without shutting down large portions of the plant.

Lower Installation Cost

Smaller wiring methods.

Better Diagnostics

Modern barriers can detect:

  • Open wires
  • Short circuits
  • Device faults

and report them to the control system.

Greater Flexibility

Easy integration with:

  • PLCs
  • DCS systems
  • SCADA systems

Where Technicians Encounter Intrinsic Safety

Common field devices include:

Sensors
  • NAMUR Proximity Sensors
  • Limit Switches
  • Level Switches
Analog Instruments
  • Pressure Transmitters
  • Flow Transmitters
  • Temperature Transmitters

Output Devices

  • Solenoid Valves
  • I/P Converters
  • Positioners

Practical Troubleshooting Mindset

When working with hazardous area instrumentation:

Always think:

Field Device

Barrier

PLC

If a signal disappears:

  1. Verify sensor operation
  2. Verify barrier power
  3. Verify barrier LEDs
  4. Verify wiring
  5. Verify PLC input

Never assume the barrier is bad until the complete signal path is checked.


Common Mistakes New Technicians Make

Mistake 1

Assuming every green module is the same.

Different barriers perform different functions.


Mistake 2

Changing DIP switch settings without documenting them.

Always take a photo first.


Mistake 3

Bypassing safety barriers.

Never bypass intrinsic safety devices.


Mistake 4

Ignoring flashing red fault LEDs.

A flashing fault LED often indicates:

  • Broken wire
  • Short circuit
  • Sensor problem

rather than a failed barrier.


Final Thoughts

Hazardous area protection is not simply a regulatory requirement—it is a fundamental part of industrial safety.

Intrinsic safety works by limiting electrical energy before it can become an ignition source. Safety barriers, isolated barriers, and intrinsically safe circuits allow automation systems to safely communicate with field devices located in potentially explosive atmospheres.

Understanding hazardous areas first makes it much easier to understand:

  • NAMUR sensors
  • Safety barriers
  • Line fault detection
  • Galvanic isolation
  • Advanced troubleshooting techniques

These concepts form the foundation of modern process automation and industrial instrumentation.

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