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신발의 전기저항 측정에 관한 연구

A Study on the Measurement of Electric Resistance of Footwear

  • 최상원 (한국산업안전보건공단 산업안전보건연구원 안전연구실) ;
  • 이석원 (한국산업안전보건공단 산업안전보건연구원 안전인증센터)
  • Choi, Sang-Won (Department of safety research, Occupational Safety and Health Research Institute, KOSHA) ;
  • Lee, Seokwon (Center for Safety Certification, Occupational Safety and Health Research Institute, KOSHA)
  • 투고 : 2013.01.03
  • 심사 : 2013.05.07
  • 발행 : 2013.06.30

초록

The occurrence of the ventricular fibrillation is directly dependent on the magnitude and duration of the current. The current which flows through the human body is proportional to the touch voltage applied across the body and is in inverse proportion to the impedances in the circuit. The circuit impedances consist of human body impedance, line impedance, equipment impedance, earth terminal impedance and impedance of shoes which a person put on. The impedance of shoes greatly affect the severity of the electric accidents. The human body impedances relevant to the contact areas, contact conditions, current paths and touch voltages are already determined in the IEC 60479-1. However, the impedance of shoes is ignored or substituted by a simple value because of the absence of the sufficient data. For example, the impedance of shoes plus ground contact resistance is postulated to be $1,000{\Omega}$ in the IEC 61200-612. In IEEE 80, the shoe resistance plus ground contact resistance is assumed to be bare foot with ${\rho}/4b{\Omega}$. In this paper, we measured and analyzed the impedance of shoes with respect to conditions such as applied weight, environment variables and voltages. The results showed that the impedance of shoes is dependent on environment variables regardless of the types of shoes. Most of shoes showed the correlation with the applied force, whereas a few shoes showed characteristics related to the applied voltage. In terms of severity of electric shock, one thirds of test samples indicated to be dangerous in saltwater conditions.

키워드

참고문헌

  1. Seokwon Lee, Hyungseok Kim, "Measurement of the resistance of shoes", 2010 Fall Conference of the Korean Society of Safety, p. 44, 2010.
  2. Electric Shock Prevention Measures for Low Voltage Electrical Facilities, Occupational Safety and Health Research Institute, KOSHA, 2009-106-1318, 2009.
  3. IEC 60479-1, Effects of Current on Human Beings and livestock- Part 1: General Aspects, 2005.
  4. IEC 1200-612, Electrical installation guide- , 1996.
  5. IEEE 80, Guide for Safety in AC Substation Grounding, 2000.
  6. KS M ISO 20344, Personal Protective Equipment - Test Methods for Footwear, 2005.
  7. ISO 20344, Personal Protective Equipment - Test Methods for Footwear, 2004.
  8. EN 50321, Electrically Insulating Footwear for Working on Low Voltage Installations, 2000.
  9. ANSI Z41, Performance Requirements for Protective Occupational Footwear, 1999.
  10. CSA Z195, Protective Foot Wear, 2002.
  11. IEC 60479, Effects of Current on Human Beings and Livestock, 2005.
  12. IEC 1200-413, Electrical Installation Guide- Protection Against Indirect Contact-Automatic Disconnection of Supply, 1996.
  13. IEEE 902, Guide for Maintenance, Operation, and Safety of Industrial and Commercial Power Systems, 1998.
  14. KS C IEC 61340-4-3, Electrostatics - Part 4-3 : Standard Test Methods for Specific Applications - Footwear, 2007.