"A current 100A DC is completely different of 100A AC."
Not sure you understand or maybe I'm the one not following your logic here. The EFFECT of 100A AC current and 100A DC current on a bi-metal sensing element in a protective device is the same. The magnetic field induced in a magnetic trip coil is the same at 1000A AC or 1000A DC, in fact when considering an AC mag trip coil, the effect on the coil is virtually DC anyway.
Electronic trips, I agree are totally different. But THIS circuit breaker does not have electronic trips, it has a bi-metal thermal trip and a plunger type magnetic trip coil. The reaction to AC or DC current is virtually the same and more to the point, there would be no "coordination" (whatever you mean by that) issues to consider that I can think of.
The term "coordination" when used in the context of circuit breakers has to do with the timing of trip settings so that any fault is cleared at the lowest possible level. In a 125VDC aux. power system within a power plant, how many sub-feed breakers are you going to have below a 160A breaker and how many levels of Mains are you going to have above it? I'd be willing to bet you have no more than 10 little MCBs down stream of this breaker, and maybe ONE breaker up stream. I can't think of a single MCB that would hold in longer than this breaker, and if you have one up stream breaker, THAT is the one to get careful on with regards to coordinating with this breaker. I just don't see this as being all that consequential in the grand scheme of an aux. power system.
But oh well, you seem bent on making this a bigger deal than it likely deserves and yet you can't talk to Siemens. Good luck.
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