4.5.3 Hazards of Electricity

Shockmost common, can cause electrocution or muscle contraction leading to secondary injury which includes falls
Fireenough heat or sparks can ignite combustible materials
Explosionselectrical spark can ignite vapors in the air
Arc Flashcan cause burns
Arc Blasta pressure wave caused by expansion of copper in short circuit

Fundamentals of Electricity

– Electrical current is the flow of electrons through a conductor.
– A conductor is a material that allows electrons to flow through it.
– An insulator resists the flow of electrons.
– Resistance opposes electron flow.
– Current Flows in a Loop or Circuit

Circuits are AC (alternating current) or DC (direct current). Usually, current is alternating current (AC). AC current has five parts:

– Electrical source
– HOT wire to the tool
– The tool itself
– NEUTRAL wire returns electricity from the tool
– GROUND

Electric Shocks. Current travels in closed circuits through conductors, example: water, metal, the human body. Shock occurs when the body becomes a part of the circuit where current enters at one point and leaves at another.

Severity of the shock depends on:

– amount of current
– determined by voltage and resistance to flow
– individual differences

Effects of Current Flow

More than 3 milliamps (ma)painful shock
More than 10 mamuscle contraction
More than 20 maconsidered severe shock
More than 30 malung paralysis – usually temporary
More than 50 mapossible ventricular fibrillation (usually fatal)
100 ma to 4 ampscertain ventricular fibrillation (fatal)
Over 4 ampsheart paralysis; severe burns