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Types of Circuit Breakers |
Circuit Breakers are mechanical switching devices that can make, break, or carry a circuit manually or automatically under normal and abnormal conditions.
A Circuit Breaker can make or break an electrical circuit under normal operating conditions, either manually or using a remote control.
Under abnormal or fault conditions, a Circuit Breaker can break the circuit automatically.
The Circuit Breaker can make the circuit under fault conditions either manually or using a remote control.
Common Types of Circuit Breakers
- a thermal part that reacts to moderate overloads;
- a magnetic part that reacts to short circuits.
ABB, MCB (Miniature Circuit Breaker) Types and section conditions:
Circuit Breaker Classification by voltage and application
Low-voltage (LV) breakers — used in homes, commercial buildings, and small distribution panels.
Medium voltage (MV) breakers — used in industrial plants and utility substations for distribution-level protection.
High voltage (HV) breakers — used on transmission systems and large substations for power-grid switching and protection.
Circuit Breaker Classification by arc-quenching medium
Air circuit breaker (ACB) — uses air as the interrupting medium; common in low-voltage switchgear.
Vacuum circuit breaker (VCB) — extinguishes the arc in a vacuum; fast operation and low maintenance for medium-voltage applications.
SF6 circuit breaker — uses sulfur hexafluoride gas for excellent arc quenching in medium and high voltages.
Oil circuit breaker — uses insulating oil to quench the arc; historically common in high-voltage equipment but less used today.
Air-blast circuit breaker — uses compressed air to blow out the arc; applied in some high-voltage systems.
Circuit Breaker Classification by construction and mounting
Miniature circuit breakers (MCB) — compact thermal-magnetic devices for low-current residential and light commercial circuits.
Molded case circuit breakers (MCCB) — larger, adjustable trip settings for industrial and larger commercial loads.
Residual current circuit breakers (RCCB / RCD / GFCI) — detect imbalance between live and neutral to protect against earth leakage and electric shock.
Earth leakage circuit breakers with overcurrent (RCBO) — combine overcurrent and earth-leakage protection in one device.
Switchgear-mounted breakers — integrated into panelboards or switchgear assemblies for distribution and protection.
Circuit Breaker Classification by operating mechanism and features
Thermal-magnetic breakers — use a bimetallic strip for overload (thermal) and an electromagnet for short-circuit trips (magnetic).
Electronic/digital trip breakers — use digital electronics for precise protection, metering, communications, and programmable trip curves.
Hydraulic-magnetic breakers — use fluid damping with a magnetic trip for stable performance under vibration and temperature changes.
Manual vs. automatic breakers — manual breakers require operator switching; automatic breakers trip on fault and can be motor-operated for remote control.
Circuit Breaker Quick selection guidance
Residential: MCBs for branch circuits, RCCB/GFCI for personal protection, MCCB for main service.
Industrial: MCCB or molded-case for feeders; VCB, SF6, or vacuum breakers for MV switchgear; digital trip units for protection coordination.
Utility/transmission: SF6, vacuum, or specialized HV breakers rated for high interrupting capacity and system voltage.
Great explanation about Circuit Breakers thank you and also as request please write a article about difference between MCB and MCCB
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