rhirsch
Mechanical
- Oct 21, 2008
- 18
Hi,
I would be cool with any cert that I would need to do, if I knew if I needed it, and which one.
I am building a machine, and I will certainly need to follow NFPA 79, becuase its a machine with a control box. fine.
Here is my question: The machine will not be used in a hazardous location. However the machine will pump hydrogen electrochemically (no moving parts).
There is no oxygen in the gas stream, so to only chance for explosion is if there is a failure. For this I have fans that cycle many volumes of air through the pump area and I have an H2 detector which cuts power to everything (except the fans). Further the electronics enclosure is separate from the pump area.
I realize certs are not by law and are only required by customers, but does a system like this need ATEX certs or anything? Or does the fact that there is never a concentration of H2 that could cause an explosion be enough?
I understand that there are many systems that work with H2, but use enclosure volume replacement rates great enough to not require hazardous location certs nor intrinsically safe equipment. Is this right?
I would be cool with any cert that I would need to do, if I knew if I needed it, and which one.
I am building a machine, and I will certainly need to follow NFPA 79, becuase its a machine with a control box. fine.
Here is my question: The machine will not be used in a hazardous location. However the machine will pump hydrogen electrochemically (no moving parts).
There is no oxygen in the gas stream, so to only chance for explosion is if there is a failure. For this I have fans that cycle many volumes of air through the pump area and I have an H2 detector which cuts power to everything (except the fans). Further the electronics enclosure is separate from the pump area.
I realize certs are not by law and are only required by customers, but does a system like this need ATEX certs or anything? Or does the fact that there is never a concentration of H2 that could cause an explosion be enough?
I understand that there are many systems that work with H2, but use enclosure volume replacement rates great enough to not require hazardous location certs nor intrinsically safe equipment. Is this right?