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Gas and Electrical Safety

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Gas escaping outside not burning. Gas Escaping outside burning. Gas ... become a great nerve, vibrating thousands of miles in a breathless point of time? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Gas and Electrical Safety


1
Gas and Electrical Safety
2
Chemical/Physical Properties of Natural Gas
  • Lighter than air
  • Naturally odorless
  • Mercaptan
  • Odor Threshold
  • Combustible limits
  • Non-Poisonous
  • Simple asphyxiant
  • Oxygen deficiency
  • 1000 Deg. F
  • Air monitoring
  • Required by OSHA

3
Responding to Blowing Gas Emergencies
  • Response scenarios
  • Emergency Response Services
  • Gas escaping outsidenot burning
  • Gas Escaping outsideburning
  • Gas escaping insidenot burning
  • Gas escaping insideburning

4
NorthWestern Energy Response
5
  • Then there is electricitythe demon, the angel,
    the mighty physical power, the all-pervading
    intelligence! Is it a factor have I dreamt
    itthat, by means of electricity, the world of
    matter has become a great nerve, vibrating
    thousands of miles in a breathless point of
    time?
  • --Nathaniel Hawthorne
  • The House of the Seven Gables, ch. 17

6
What Is Electricity?
  • Form of Energy
  • Energy is Power
  • Electricity
  • Atoms
  • Protons
  • Neutrons
  • Electrons
  • Voltage
  • Generator
  • Electrical pressure
  • Current

7
Where Does Electricity Come From?
  • Circuit
  • Power Plant
  • Power lines
  • Transmission wires
  • Substations
  • Smaller power lines
  • Transformers
  • Service drops
  • Meter box
  • Wires inside walls
  • Outlets and switches

8
Electricity Travels Through Conductors
  • Conductor
  • Metals
  • Copper
  • Aluminum
  • Water
  • Your body
  • Electricity travels at the speed of light
  • 186,000 miles per second

9
Insulators Keep Electricity Where it Belongs
  • Insulators
  • Glass
  • Plastic
  • Ceramic
  • Break or disconnect
  • Touch potential

10
How Electricity Acts
  • Think of electricity as water
  • Reservoir? Pipes? Pump
  • Generator? Electric Conductors? Pressure
    (Voltage) Generator
  • Water Flow
  • Water current
  • Electricity Flow
  • Electric current
  • Voltage is the pressure causing the current
    (electrons) to move through the wire
  • Measuring Water
  • 10 gallons per second
  • Measuring Electricity
  • 25 amps

11
How Electricity Acts
12
Electrical Safety
  • What are the hazards?
  • 5th leading cause of death
  • 5,348 deaths
  • 411 deaths per year
  • How can a worker be exposed or put at risk?
  • Present at most jobsites
  • Workers exposed to electrical energy daily
  • Broken light bulb
  • Overhead power lines

13
How Electricity Affects the Body
  • Amperage
  • Amperage is the most destructive factor in
    electrical accidents.
  • Electrical Injuries consist of four main types
  • Electrocution (fatal)
  • Electric shock
  • Burns
  • Falls caused as a result of contact with
    electrical energy
  • For death to occur
  • Body must become part of an active electrical
    circuit
  • Extent of injuries
  • Depends on the currents magnitude (amperage), the
    pathway of the current through the body, and the
    duration of current flow through the body

14
How Electricity Affects the Body
  • 5 Milliamps is the trip setting for GFCI
    protection
  • 60 Milliamps is the current required to light a
    7.5-Watt light bulb
  • 800 Milliamps is required to power a 100-Watt
    light bulb
  • 8,000 Milliamps is required to power a 1,000-Watt
    hair dryer

15
Electrical Injuries May Occur in Various Ways
  • Direct contact
  • Flash burns
  • Flame Burns
  • Falls from heights

16
Effects of Contact to the Body
  • High Voltage
  • Small superficial injury
  • Destroys subcutaneous tissues
  • Internal blood vessels may clot
  • Nerves in the contact area may be damaged
  • Muscle contractions may cause skeletal fractures
  • Temperatures in excess of 1800 degrees F
  • Hot enough to vaporize skin instantly

17
Accident Statistics
  • 12 of all construction accidents
  • 50 Heavy Equipment
  • Distribution lines hit most frequently
  • 90 involve overhead
  • Why?
  • Typically ground helper injured
  • Moving/adjusting equipment

18
Overhead Power Lines
19
Mobile Equipment
  • Limit of approach
  • For every kV increase, increase the distance by
    0.4 inch

20
Power Line Approach Guidelines
  • Always observe Limit of Approach
  • Use a signalman
  • Consider all Power Lines as Live!
  • Notify NWE when operating near a Power Line
  • Keep personnel away from equipment when near the
    Limit of Approach
  • Slow down
  • Use warning devices
  • Consider long spans and wind
  • Dump trucks
  • Excavation Equipment

21
Always Call Before You Dig!
  • Two business days before you dig.
  • 1-800-424-5555

22
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23
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24
If Contact Occurs
25
If Contact Occurs
V1
Touch Potential
V2
26
If Contact Occurs
Step Potential
V2
V3
27
If Contact Occurs
28
Other Options After Contact
29
Other Considerations
  • Reclosures

30
Other Considerations
  • Inductance

31
Other Considerations
32
Poles
33
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34
Remember
  • Electricity will flow through conductive
    material.
  • Never let any object within the Limit of
    Approach.
  • When machinery touches power lines, all metal
    parts become electrified.
  • If power lines break and fall onto communication
    wires, fences, or other metal objects, these also
    become energized.
  • In an emergency, always assess the situation and
    dont panic and get tunnel vision.
  • Be aware of the location and clearance of power
    lines at all times.
  • ALWAYS treat power lines as if they are energized!

35
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