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Hospital Power System

Former Community Member
Former Community Member
How is a hospital power system typical designed in the UK, Europe and Russia? Does anyone have a single line diagram?
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  • Former Community Member
    0 Former Community Member

    OMS:




    ProMbrooke:

    What about grouping of the automatic transfer switches? How do branches need to be subdivided or grouped?


    I know I keep asking, but any example single lines? Or of Primary, Secondary and Territary?


    Why is territary power needed if the medical equipment has backup batteries? 


    Excellent replies btw :)




     

    There are "typical" UK biased SLD's in HTM 06-01   -  take a look, but note they are very high level to demonstrate the type of load supplied from the type of system


    Even if a particular piece of kit (BiPap pump as an example) has integral batteries, you probably want to save those until it's last ditch and you are moving the patient - until you reach that point, the healthcare environment needs to provide the support - hence the tertiary systems that will ride you through engagement with your secondary power systems (many clinical applications have defined allowable break times)


    As I said, read HTM 06-01 first, that should give you a good understanding.


    Is this just curiosity, or are you planning on embarking on a design ?


    Regards


    OMS




     

     












    If wondering here is why I ask. In the US hospitals by code are required to have an essential electrical system and it must be divided into 3 branches. Over 150kva it also must have a minimum of 3 automatic transfer switches.


    The branches are:


    1) Life safety


    2) Critical


    3) Equipment


    Life safety is required to feed exit signs; emergency lighting in hallways, stairwells, points of egress; evacuation speakers; fire alarms and med gas alarming systems, automatic doors used in evacuation, elevator cab lights and lighting/outlets at generator and ATS locations... basically what is required to contain and evacuate occupants from a burning building.


    Critical feeds patient room lighting, patient bed outlets, ORs, blood and bone banks, pharmacy dispencing machines, task illumination... basically anything essential to patient care and life support.


    Equipment feeds HVAC equipment, elevators, pumps, medical gas equipment... anything that is needed in the continuation of basic medical care but not immediately vital.


    UPS or a teritary system is not mandated by code and only found in some newer hospitals seen when feeding IT equipment, MRIs, ect.


    Code requires that critical care areas have a certain percentage receptacles on normal power (typically 1/3 the outlets at a patient bed location, OR, ICU, ect)  and that some level of lighting is connected to the normal branch. The idea is that if the critical branch fails during the presence of utility power, the area will not be blacked out. If more than one critical ATS exists then a critical care area can be fed from both branches and normal power is not required.





    Here is an example single line diagram:















Reply
  • Former Community Member
    0 Former Community Member

    OMS:




    ProMbrooke:

    What about grouping of the automatic transfer switches? How do branches need to be subdivided or grouped?


    I know I keep asking, but any example single lines? Or of Primary, Secondary and Territary?


    Why is territary power needed if the medical equipment has backup batteries? 


    Excellent replies btw :)




     

    There are "typical" UK biased SLD's in HTM 06-01   -  take a look, but note they are very high level to demonstrate the type of load supplied from the type of system


    Even if a particular piece of kit (BiPap pump as an example) has integral batteries, you probably want to save those until it's last ditch and you are moving the patient - until you reach that point, the healthcare environment needs to provide the support - hence the tertiary systems that will ride you through engagement with your secondary power systems (many clinical applications have defined allowable break times)


    As I said, read HTM 06-01 first, that should give you a good understanding.


    Is this just curiosity, or are you planning on embarking on a design ?


    Regards


    OMS




     

     












    If wondering here is why I ask. In the US hospitals by code are required to have an essential electrical system and it must be divided into 3 branches. Over 150kva it also must have a minimum of 3 automatic transfer switches.


    The branches are:


    1) Life safety


    2) Critical


    3) Equipment


    Life safety is required to feed exit signs; emergency lighting in hallways, stairwells, points of egress; evacuation speakers; fire alarms and med gas alarming systems, automatic doors used in evacuation, elevator cab lights and lighting/outlets at generator and ATS locations... basically what is required to contain and evacuate occupants from a burning building.


    Critical feeds patient room lighting, patient bed outlets, ORs, blood and bone banks, pharmacy dispencing machines, task illumination... basically anything essential to patient care and life support.


    Equipment feeds HVAC equipment, elevators, pumps, medical gas equipment... anything that is needed in the continuation of basic medical care but not immediately vital.


    UPS or a teritary system is not mandated by code and only found in some newer hospitals seen when feeding IT equipment, MRIs, ect.


    Code requires that critical care areas have a certain percentage receptacles on normal power (typically 1/3 the outlets at a patient bed location, OR, ICU, ect)  and that some level of lighting is connected to the normal branch. The idea is that if the critical branch fails during the presence of utility power, the area will not be blacked out. If more than one critical ATS exists then a critical care area can be fed from both branches and normal power is not required.





    Here is an example single line diagram:















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