Jeff,

Items 2 and 4 are probably correct.  It is a very specialized subject
that most compliance people do not deal with.  You have a list of 10
questions that are quite general like "are water fittings inherently
unsafe?".  These probably require detailed answers that take some
research.  Most questions posed on the EMC-PSTC are single, very
specific questions, and those individuals with specific expertise can
answer them in a couple paragraphs.

Darrell Locke
Advanced Input Devices
 ----------
From: JENKINS, JEFF
To: JENKINS, JEFF; 'emc-pstc'
Subject: RE: water-cooled electrodes
List-Post: [email protected]
Date: Friday, November 13, 1998 10:26AM

Hi all,

I have received no responses to the original e-mail copied below.  This
in
itself is rather interesting and I would like to know why, so if any of
you
have opinions on this, I'd like to hear them.  My assumption is that
there
have been no responses for one or more of the following reasons:

(1) Such knowledge is considered a market advantage and is proprietary;

(2) No one in the group has knowledge pertaining to this subject;

(3) People are queasy about the subject;

(4) The query was lengthy and people did not have the time to respond
(quite
understandable);

(5) The query was unclear;

(6) For some mysterious reason, the e-mail didn't reach anyone in the
group
but me and my colleague at Advanced Energy.

Anybody want to take a stab at this?

Regards,

Jeff Jenkins
Senior Regulatory Compliance Engineer
Advanced Energy Industries, Inc.
Fort Collins, CO USA 80525

Opinions are my own and not necessarily shared by Advanced Energy
Industries, Inc. or its affiliates.

 -----Original Message-----
From: JENKINS, JEFF
Sent: Wednesday, November 04, 1998 2:07 PM
To: 'emc-pstc'
Subject: water-cooled electrodes


I would like to know if anyone in the group has been involved with the
AGENCY APPROVAL of a product containing a water-cooled live electrode or
coil, and what had to be done to make this safe in the eyes of the
agency.
My company is occasionally involved with this sort of thing, and some
feel
that we are being overly conservative and perhaps unnecessarily
burdening
our products with extra cost.  To date we have only CE-marked such
products
and have had no third-party involvement.

Partial list of concerns:

(1) Is it considered necessary to completely isolate the water-cooled
live
component from circuitry by locating it in a separate chamber?

(2) Single-fault safety when circuitry is in the same enclosure as the
coil
 -- if the tube ruptures and the box fills up with water, this is a
hazard as
water is rightly considered a conductive element.  Drains are sometimes
used
to avoid this, but there is still the problem of water spraying.  Splash
guards and the like may be used but this involves some expense.  Is
copper
tubing considered inherently unsafe, i.e. something that is expected to
rupture?

(3) If we use de-ionized water (and stainless steel tubing to avoid the
copper corrosion problem), can we assume the water acts as a protective
impedance?  Could we prove this by filling the chamber with de-ionized
water, applying RF, and measuring the leakage current?  How much RF
leakage
current is permissible?

(4) Are water fittings considered inherently unsafe?  We have been
unable to
find any agency-approved fittings.

(5) Has anyone considered (or accepted) putting a ferrite around the
water
tubing to form an inductor, thus limiting the RF current in the water?
Or
coiling the tubing to create an air-core inductor?

(6) I once received an RF burn from an experimental system with a
water-cooled cathode.  This was in a crude garage shop atmosphere (not
our
company).  The cathode was immersed in water that was sourced from a
faucet,
so it was ordinary tap water.  The supply was 400kHz, 5kW.  The water
supply
hose was ordinary garden hose.  Between the faucet and the cathode were
two
lengths of garden hose with brass fittings.  I inadvertently touched the
fitting that connected the two hoses together, about ten feet from the
cathode.  The only grounding at the time was whatever was achieved at
the
faucet.  We later provided some grounding at the fittings and
supplementary
grounding at the faucet.  All this prompts the question: Is it
considered
sufficient protection if the bulkhead fittings are fitted to a grounded
enclosure?  Are starwashers or the like required?

(7) Is it necessary to provide a SUPPLEMENTARY ground for the enclosure
containing the water-cooled coil/electrode?

(8) What if, instead of running water THROUGH the coil, the entire coil
is
IMMERSED        in water in a metal enclosure?  Would double ground
connections be sufficient, assuming the leakage current is within
allowable
limits?

(9) Is it allowable to connect neoprene hose to the coil?  I have some
doubts about neoprene's capacity to withstand RF fields.  What hose
materials would be considered safe/reliable?

(10) Is a drain required?  If so, must it be large enough to drain the
water
at the maximum rate at which it could accumulate, or is the pressure
relief
provided by the drain sufficient?  Then there's the question of
equipment
orientation . . . must a drain be provided to serve each potential
physical
orientation of the installed equipment?

These are just a few of the questions that have come to mind as I've
considered water-cooled systems in the past.  I would appreciate your
inputs
on these and other related issues you may think of.

Thanks for your time,

Jeff Jenkins
Senior Regulatory Compliance Engineer
Advanced Energy Industries, Inc.
Fort Collins, CO USA 80525

Opinions are my own and not necessarily shared by Advanced Energy
Industries, Inc. or its affiliates.

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