Electrical Safety Topics Examined

Electrical Safety Topics
Basic Electrical Safety

Electrical safety is very important to the lives of electrical workers. While electricity plays an important role in our everyday lives, it also has the capability to seriously injure or kill a human being. Here are a few essential terms that you’ll find when dealing with electrical safety:

  • Arc Blast; An explosion of molten material from electrical equipment as a result of high-amperage arcs
  • Arc Flash; An electrical spark and bright electrical discharge that occurs through the air when large amounts of electricity is present in a gap between conductors
  • Bonding; Electrical parts that join together to complete a conductive path
  • Circuit; A complete path of electrical current
  • Circuit breaker; An electrical device that automatically cuts off electrical current in a circuit when an overload happens

  • De-energize: The process of the switching off and depleting stored energy sources to equipment and circuits
  • Energized; Live electrical equipment with available voltage that can produce a current and thus compromising a person
  • Ground; A direct electrical pathway to the earth
  • Ground Fault; An electrical current that is lost from the circuit and is instead directed to the ground
  • Lock-out; A physical lock applied to electrical equipment and electrical circuits once they’re turned off and de-energized
  • Qualified Person; A person who has received the required training on electrical hazards and on the operation and the construction of the equipment for the job
  • Overload; An overflow of electrical current in a circuit
  • Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) Devices; Worn by workers for face, eye, head, hand, foot, respiratory, arm, leg, body, and fall protection
  • Resistance; The material’s ability to cease or decrease electrical current
  • Shocking Current; The electricity that goes through the entire or part of the human body
  • Tag-out; Tags applied to locked electrical equipment informing workers that equipment and circuits are locked out

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