All the papers and textbooks I've read show that the peak asymmetrical current (including DC offset component) is simply sqrt(2) times the RMS symmetrical fault current. However, when you look at breaker ratings, the given asymmetrical interrupting rating is never a simple multiplier difference (like sqrt(2)) of the symmetrical fault rating value.
Based on what I've read, the X/R ratio determines how quickly the DC offset decays, which matters for breaker selection because it determines how much the peak current has reduced over the given number of cycles for the breaker to operate (eg 5 cycles). Still, how do you calculate that initial (momentary?) peak current value (the symmetrical AC component + the "asymmetrical" DC component)?
I've also read about Multiplying Factors to use for de rating the breaker when the circuit X/R is larger than the X/R for which the breaker was tested.
So do you need to somehow use X/R (whether given, assumed using typical values from IEEE 242, or calculated from the various X's and R's of the components in the circuit) when doing fault calculations to find interrupting asymmetrical values?
Based on what I've read, the X/R ratio determines how quickly the DC offset decays, which matters for breaker selection because it determines how much the peak current has reduced over the given number of cycles for the breaker to operate (eg 5 cycles). Still, how do you calculate that initial (momentary?) peak current value (the symmetrical AC component + the "asymmetrical" DC component)?
I've also read about Multiplying Factors to use for de rating the breaker when the circuit X/R is larger than the X/R for which the breaker was tested.
So do you need to somehow use X/R (whether given, assumed using typical values from IEEE 242, or calculated from the various X's and R's of the components in the circuit) when doing fault calculations to find interrupting asymmetrical values?