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A circuit breaker is a piece of equipment which is designed to protect an electrical apparatus from damage caused by overload or short circuit. Unlike a fuse which operates once and then has to be replaced, a circuit breaker can be reset (either manually or automatically) to resume normal operation. Circuit breakers are often implemented with a solenoid (electromagnet) whose strength increases as the current increases and eventually trips the circuit breaker. Alternatively a bimetallic strip may be used which heats and bends with increased current. Some circuit breakers incorporate both techniques. This allows the properties of the circuit breaker to be tailored to suit the application, with the electromagnet generally responding to short, large surges in current (short circuit) and the bimetallic strip responding to smaller but longer-term (overload) overcurrent conditions. Under short-circuit conditions a current of several thousand amps can flow (see maximum prospective short circuit current) and when a circuit breaker tries to interrupt this current an arc may form allowing the flow of current to continue even though the contacts of the circuit breaker are open. Some smaller circuit breakers incorporate a device which divides and extinguishes this arc. Larger circuit breakers such as those used in electrical power distribution may use vacuum, an inert gas such as sulfur hexafluoride or have contacts immersed in oil to suppress the arc. Circuit breakers are either installed directly in equipment, or are arranged in a breaker panel.
Internal details of a European breakerPhotograph of the inside of a 10 amp European DIN-rail mounted thermal-magnetic miniature circuit breaker. Circuit breakers such as this are the most common style in modern domestic consumer units and commercial electrical distribution boards throughout Europe. Unfortunately while the size and shape of the opening in the front and its elevation from the rail are standardised the arrangements for busbar connections are not so you should take care that the breaker you select fits the busbar in your board and preferably is the same make and range.
Common trip breakersThree pole common trip breaker for supplying a three-phase device. This breaker has a 2 Amp rating. Common trip breakers are usually purchased already-assembled into groups of 2, 3, or the like. When supplying a branch circuit with more than one live conductor, each live conductor must be protected by a breaker pole. To ensure that all live conductors are interrupted when any pole trips, a "common trip" breaker must be used. These may either contain two or three tripping mechanisms within one case, or for small breakers, may externally tie the poles together via their operating handles. Two pole common trip breakers are common on 120 volt systems where 240 volt loads (including major appliances or further distribution boards) span the two out-of-phase live wires. Three pole common trip breakers are typically used to supply three phase power to large motors or further distribution boards.
Types of circuit breakerMissing image LargeCircuitBreaker.jpg Front panel of a 1250A air circuit breaker. The breaker can be withdrawn from its housing for servicing. Trip characteristics are configurable via DIP switches on the front panel.
High Voltage Circuit BreakersMissing image Circuit_Breaker_115_kV.jpg A 1200 Amp 3 Pole 115,000 V breaker at a generating station in Manitoba, Canada.
High voltage breakers are broadly classified by the medium used to extinguish the arc.
High voltage breakers are routinely available up to 765 kV AC. Other BreakersThe following types are described in a separate article.
(In the United States, these are both referred to as "GFCIs" (Ground Fault Circuit Interrupters). The U.S. description leaves it unclear whether overcurrent protection is provided, but the standard U.S. practice is that the style that looks like a circuit breaker and mount into panelboards (distribution boards) also provides overcurrent protection while the style that looks like a wall outlet does not.) See also
es:Magnetotérmico ja:遮断器 he:מאמ"ת
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