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General electrical safety

Electricity can be dangerous in the following situations:

  1. If an electrical wire is damaged. This might expose the live wire meaning a person received an electrical shock if they touched it.

  2. Damp conditions. Water that is not pure can conduct electricity. In damp conditions a current could flow outside of a live wire and cause an electrical shock.

  3. Overloading of plug sockets or extension cables. Excess current could flow if more than the recommended number of appliances is plugged in. This could cause a fire if the cables overheat.

  4. Overheating cables. Hot cables could start a fire, or melt through the insulating plastic coating, exposing the live wire.

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Podcast: Domestic uses and safety

In this episode, Ellie Hurer and James Stewart explore the domestic uses of electricity and dissect the key features of a three-pin plug. They also discuss direct and alternating potential difference.

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Earthing

An electric cooker with the wiring section magnified to show the live, neutral and earth wires as well as the mains power. The earth wire is also connected to the cooker's casing.

A mains circuit consists of a live wire (line wire) which carries electricity to the appliance, a neutral wire which carries it away from the appliance and an earth wire. Because the live wire carries electricity to the appliance, a switch must be connected here to switch the circuit off safely in case there is a fault with it.

Without the earth wire, if a fault occurs and the live wire becomes loose, there is a danger that it will touch the case. The next person who uses the appliance could get .

The earth wire is therefore connected to the case and is attached to a metal plate or water pipe underground. As the wire is made of copper, the earth wire provides a low path to the ground. In the event of a fault, the live current passing through the case will follow this path to the ground instead of passing through a person.

Some electrical appliances are double-insulated because they have plastic cases not metal ones. These do not need to have an earth wire because they cannot become live.

Fuses

A fuse provides a built-in fail-safe to the electrical circuit for a device. The fuse contains a thin wire that will melt if the current gets too high. If there is a fault that causes the casing of the device to become live, a large current will flow through the low-resistance earth wire. This high current will cause the fuse to melt.

Fuses for appliances must match the expected current for that appliance. For example, a desk lamp will have a small current flowing through it, so a fuse of 3 amps is appropriate. A kettle or toaster will have a much larger current flowing through it, so a fuse of 13 amps is appropriate. The rating of the fuse should be slightly greater than the expected current.

Once the fuse has melted, the circuit is broken and no more current flows through the device. This means the case of the device is no longer live and there is no risk of electrocution.

A circuit breaker can serve the same function as a fuse but can be reset without the need for replacement if it trips.

The fuse or circuit breaker must be connected in the live wire side of a domestic circuit to ensure that it keeps high voltage from reaching the user, or surroundings, if a fault develops.

A fuse protects the appliance but does not protect the person using it.

It can take up to two seconds for a fuse to melt which is long enough for the user to be electrocuted.

Currents as small as 50 mA (milliamp) can cause electrocution and a fuse would not prevent this from flowing along the live wire.

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Quiz

Test your knowledge of electrical safety with this quiz.

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