Classify and certify for safety January 1st 2008 ATEX Directives are designed to
protect employees, the public and
the environment from accidents
owing to explosive atmospheres.
Since July 1 2006 all existing sites,
as well as new ones, must be fully
ATEX compliant. Directive ATEX
100a applies to equipment
manufacturers and ATEX 137
applies to end users.
ATEX 100a covers both electrical
and non-electrical products
intended for use in hazardous
areas, including mechanical
equipment. The Directive came into
existence in 2003 and products
sold within the European Union
designed for use in hazardous
areas must have ATEX certification
and bear the ATEX marking on the
product. The obligation is placed
upon the manufacturer or supplier
of the product and the intention is
to facilitate free movement of
goods within the EU. Products are
categorised 1, 2 and 3 with
category 1 meaning the product
employs a very high level of
protection; category 2, a high level
of protection; category 3, a normal
level of protection.
The ATEX 137 Directive sets out
to improve the heath and safety
protection of all workers potentially
at risk from explosive atmospheres
with duties placed upon the
employer. The directive is
designed to harmonise the law of
EU member states concerning
equipment and protective systems
intended for use in potentially
explosive areas. Its main
requirements have been the need
to classify areas as Zones 0, 1 and
2 for gases and vapours and
Zones 20, 21, 22 for dusts.
Equipment for use in these areas
must be selected in accordance
with ATEX 100a and marked with
an EX sign. In workplaces where
safety restrictions apply throughout
the site, such as refineries, the sign
must be applied at the entrance of
the site – individual signs would
not be required.
A mixture of air and hazardous
gases may ignite by coming into
contact with a hot surface. Ignition
depends on surface area,
temperature and concentration of
the gases. Certified equipment,
tested by approved agencies,
receives a temperature code (T1-
T6) indicating the maximum surface
temperature where it can be used.
The influences of the ATEX
Directives are spread far and wide,
covering industries and
applications as diverse as oil and
gas exploration, food processing,
brewing, pharmaceutical
production, paint spraying, flour
milling and the storage of grain in
silos – indeed, anywhere that a
potentially explosive combination
of a fuel, oxygen and ignition
source can all be present.
Of course, the conditions also
have to be right for an explosion to
occur, which means that factors
such as the temperature and the
ratio of fuel to oxygen also have an
influence. While there has been a
great deal of attention paid to
primary equipment destined for
use in hazardous areas, some
types of component have
occasionally been neglected. In a
few cases this has been through
ignorance, but more often it has
been due to a lack of suitable
products. Electrical conduit and
fittings, for example, are commonly
used within hazardous areas and,
although flameproof barrier glands
have been available for many
years, the ATEX Directive has
imposed additional requirements
that mean many of the tried-andtested
glands still do not match the
ATEX requirements.
The IECEx scheme (International
Electrotechnical Commission for
Certification to Standards Relating
to Equipment for Use in Explosive
Atmospheres) meets the
requirements of international
standards such as those prepared
by TC31. The Certified Equipment
Programme provides a certificate
of conformity that includes testing
and assessment of samples,
compliance of samples with IEC
standards, assessment of
manufacturing premises and ongoing
surveillance audits.
All the products specified as
IECEx compliant have been
certified through the programme
and Kopex remains the only
provider of this range of cable
management products to carry the
scheme certification. Kopex can
provide all organisations with
advice on the specification of ATEX
approved electrical conduit
systems for specific hazardous
area applications. More articles from Kopex International Ltd: |