Section 0 Principles of Product Safety

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The key takeaways are that IEC 62368-1 is a new safety standard that aims to replace IEC 60065 and IEC 60950-1. It addresses various types of injuries including electrically-caused, mechanically-caused, thermally-caused, and radiation-caused injuries.

The different types of injuries addressed in the standard are electrically-caused, mechanically-caused, thermally-caused (skin burn), and radiation-caused injuries.

IEC 62368-1 follows a hazard based approach to safety using HBSE principles, but it is not a full HBSE or risk based standard. It relies on performance tests to demonstrate safety.

Information and Communication

Technology Equipment Part 1: Safety Requirements,


UL 62368-1

Section 0
Principles of Product
Safety
Copyright 2012
Charles Bayhi
CPSM Corporation

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
Background
IEC 62368-1/UL 62368-1
New Safety Standard for
Consumer Electronic (Audio/Video) Apparatus,
Information Technology Equipment, and
Communication Technology Equipment
NOT a simple merger of IEC 60065 and IEC 60950-

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
Background
Is intended to ultimately replace IEC 60065 and IEC

60950-1;
IEC Standard initially published in 2010 with a minimum
five (5) year effective date that is being recommended by
IEC TC108;
Its Test Report Form (TRF) has been published;
Publication of national standards based on IEC 62368-1
expected to follow after the publication of IEC 62368-1.
It is hoped that National/Regional Committees will adopt effective

dates that will coincide with the effective date timing


recommended by IEC TC108, but this cannot be guaranteed.
Since the five-year transition period is the best case scenario,
theres no guarantee that one or more regulators will not adopt
the standard sooner.
Retailers and other major customers may demand a product to
be certified to IEC 62368-1 sooner than the transition period.

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
Background
IEC 62368-1
Its scope is broad and inclusive of the current IEC
60065 and IEC 60950-1.
Follows a different approach to safety using HBSE
principles but it is not a full HBSE or Risk Based
standard it relies on performance tests to
demonstrate safety.
Its Hazard Based approach is different than that of
the more prescriptive approach taken by the
existing standards, i.e., IEC 60065 and IEC 60950-1.

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
Workshop Format
Series of presentations
Each presentation will go thru the

standard, Section by Section


Section
Section
Section
Section
Section
Section
Section

0,
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6,

Principles of Product Safety,


Scope (skip)
Normative References (skip)
Terms and Definitions
General Requirements
Electrically Caused Injuries

Open discussion

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0 Principles of this product safety standard
0.1 Objective
Classifies energy sources,
prescribes safeguards against those energy sources,
and provides guidance on the application of, and
Requirements for those safeguards.
0.2 Persons
0.2.1 General
This standard describes safeguards for the protection
of three kinds of persons: the ordinary person, the
instructed person, and the skilled person. This
standard assumes that a person will not
intentionally create conditions or situations that could
cause pain or injury.

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.2.2 Ordinary person
Ordinary person is the term applied to all

persons other than instructed persons and


skilled persons.
Ordinary persons include not only users of the

equipment, but also all persons who may have


access to the equipment or who may be in the vicinity of
the equipment.
Under normal operating conditions or abnormal
operating conditions,
o ordinary persons should not be exposed to
parts comprising energy sources capable of
causing pain or injury.
Under a single fault condition,
o ordinary persons should not be exposed to parts
comprising energy sources capable of causing injury.

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.2.3 Instructed person
Instructed person is a term applied to

persons who have been instructed and


trained by a skilled person,
or who are supervised by a skilled
person, to identify energy sources that
may cause pain (see Table 1) and to take
precautions to avoid unintentional contact
with or exposure to those energy sources.
Under normal operating conditions, abnormal

operating conditions or single fault conditions,


instructed persons should not be exposed to
parts comprising energy sources capable of
causing injury.

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.2.4 Skilled person
Skilled person is a term applied to

persons who have training or experience


in the equipment technology, particularly
in knowing the various energies and energy
magnitudes employed in the equipment.
A skilled person is expected to use their

training and experience to recognize energy


sources capable of causing pain or injury and to
take action for protection from injury from those
energies.
Skilled persons should also be protected against
unintentional contact or exposure to energy sources
capable of causing injury.

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.3 Model for pain and injury

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
Three classes of energy sources
Defined by magnitudes and durations of

source parameters relative to either the body


or to combustible material responses to
those energy sources.
Each energy class is a function of the body
part or the combustible material
susceptibility to that energy magnitude

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.4 Energy sources

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.5 Safeguards
The scheme that reduces the likelihood of

energy transfer to a body part is a


safeguard

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.5 Safeguards
A safeguard is a device or scheme or system that
is interposed between an energy source capable of causing pain

or injury and a body part, and


reduces the likelihood of transfer of energy capable of causing
pain or injury to a body part.
Safeguard mechanisms against transfer of energy

capable of causing pain or injury include

attenuating the energy (reduces the value of the energy), or


impeding the energy (slows the rate of energy transfer), or
diverting the energy (changes the energy direction), or
disconnecting, interrupting, or disabling the energy source, or
enveloping the energy source (reduces the likelihood of the

energy from escaping), or


interposing a barrier between a body part and the energy
source.

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.5 Safeguards
A safeguard
can be applied to the equipment,
to the local installation,
to a person
or can be a learned or directed behavior (for

example, resulting from an instructional


safeguard) intended to reduce the likelihood of
transfer of energy capable of causing pain or injury.

A safeguard may be a single element or

may be a set of elements.

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.5 Safeguards
Ideally, the order of preference for providing
safeguards is:
equipment safeguards;
installation safeguards;
instructional safeguards invoking personal

protective equipment, or avoidance behavior.

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.5 Safeguards
0.5.2 Equipment safeguard
An equipment safeguard may be a basic

safeguard, a supplementary safeguard, a


double safeguard, or a reinforced safeguard.

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.5 Safeguards
0.5.4 Instructional safeguard
An instructional safeguard is a visual indicator

(symbols or words or both) or an audible


message describing the existence and location of an
energy source capable of causing pain or injury and is
intended to invoke a specific behavior on the part of a
person to reduce the likelihood of transfer of energy
to a body part.
An instructional safeguard may be a basic
safeguard, or a supplementary safeguard.
Provision of an instructional safeguard does not
result in an ordinary person becoming an
instructed person

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.5 Safeguards
0.5.5 Personal safeguard
A personal safeguard may be a basic

safeguard, a supplementary safeguard, or a


reinforced Safeguard.
Requirements for personal safeguards (personal
protective equipment) are not addressed in
this standard. However, this standard does assume
that personal safeguards are available for use
as specified by the manufacturer.

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.5 Safeguards
0.5.6 Safeguards during ordinary or
instructed person service conditions
During ordinary person or instructed person

service conditions, safeguards for such


persons may be necessary.
Such safeguards can be
equipment safeguards,
personal safeguards,
or instructional safeguards.
Application of these safeguards is specified in
the respective clauses.

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.5 Safeguards
0.5.7 Equipment safeguards during skilled
person service conditions
During skilled person service conditions,
equipment safeguards should be provided
to protect against the effects of a bodys
involuntary reaction (for example, startle) that
might cause unintentional contact with a class
3 energy source located outside the view of the
skilled person. This safeguard typically
applies in large equipment, where the
skilled person may need to partially or
wholly enter between two or more class 3
energy source locations while servicing.

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.5 Safeguards
0.5.8 Precautionary safeguard
A precautionary safeguard is the training and

experience or supervision of an instructed person


by a skilled person to use precautions to protect
the instructed person against class 2 energy
sources.
Precautionary safeguards are not specifically
prescribed in this standard but are assumed to be
effective when the term instructed person is used.
During equipment servicing, an instructed person may
need to remove or defeat an equipment safeguard.
In this case, an instructed person must then apply
precaution as a safeguard to avoid injury.

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.5 Safeguards
0.5.9 Skill safeguard
A skill safeguard is the education, training,

knowledge and experience of the skilled


person that is employed to protect the skilled
person against class 2 and class 3 energy
sources. Skill safeguards are not specifically
prescribed in this standard but are assumed to be
effective when the term skilled person is used.
During equipment servicing, a skilled person may
need to remove or defeat an equipment
safeguard. In this case, a skilled person must
then apply skill as a safeguard to avoid injury.

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.5 Safeguards
0.5.10 Examples of safeguard
characteristics

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.5 Safeguards
0.5.10 Examples of safeguard
characteristics

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.6 Electrically-caused pain or injury

(electric shock)

Electrically-caused pain or injury may occur when

electrical energy capable of causing pain or injury


is transferred to a body part
Electrical energy transfer occurs when there are
two or more electrical contacts to the body:
the first electrical contact is between a body part and

a conductive part of the equipment;


the second electrical contact is between another body
part, and
earth, or
another conductive part of the equipment.

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.6 Electrically-caused pain or

injury
0.6.2 Models for electrically-caused pain

or injury

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.6 Electrically-caused pain or

injury
0.6.3 Models for protection against

electrically-caused pain or injury

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.7 Electrically-caused fire
0.7.2 Models for electrically-caused fire

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.7 Electrically-caused fire
0.7.3 Models for protection against
electrically-caused fire
The basic safeguard against electrically-

caused fire is that the temperature of a


material, under normal operating conditions
and abnormal operating conditions, does not
cause the material to ignite.
The supplementary safeguard against
electrically-caused fire reduces the likelihood
of ignition or, in the case of ignition, reduces the
likelihood of spread of fire.

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.7 Electrically-caused fire
0.7.3 Models for protection against
electrically-caused fire

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.8 Chemically-caused injury
The basic safeguard against chemicallycaused injury is containment of the
material.
Supplementary safeguards against
chemically-caused injury may include:
a second container or a spill-resistant container;
containment trays;
tamper-proof screws to prevent unauthorized

access;

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.9 Mechanically-caused injury
Examples of kinetic energy sources are:
body motion relative to sharp edges and corners;
part motion due to rotating or other moving parts,

including pinch points;


part motion due to loosening, exploding, or
imploding parts;
equipment motion due to instability;
equipment motion due to wall, ceiling, or rack
mounting means failure;
equipment motion due to handle failure;
part motion due to an exploding battery;
equipment motion due to cart or stand instability
or failure.

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.9 Mechanically-caused injury
The basic safeguard against mechanicallycaused injury is a function of the specific
energy source.
Basic safeguards may include:

rounded edges and corners;


an enclosure to prevent a moving part from being

accessible;
an enclosure to prevent expelling a moving part;
a safety interlock to control access to an otherwise
moving part;
means to stop the motion of a moving part;
means to stabilize the equipment;
handles;
mounting means;
means to contain parts expelled during explosion or
implosion.

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.9 Mechanically-caused injury
The supplementary safeguard against
mechanically-caused injury is a function of the
specific energy
source. Supplementary safeguards may include:

instructional safeguards;
instructions and training;
additional enclosures or barriers;
safety interlocks.

The reinforced safeguard against mechanically-

caused injury is a function of the specific


energy source. Reinforced safeguards may
include:
extra thick glass on the front of a CRT;
rack slide-rails and means of support;
safety interlock.

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.10 Thermally-caused injury (skin

burn)
0.10.2 Models for thermally-caused

injury

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.10 Thermally-caused injury (skin

burn)
0.10.2 Models for thermally-caused

injury

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.11 Radiation-caused injury
Radiation-caused injury within the scope of

this standard is generally attributed to one of


the following energy transfer mechanisms:
heating of a body organ caused by exposure to

non-ionizing radiation, such as the highly localized


energy of a laser impinging on the retina, or heating
a larger volume such as the energy from a high
frequency wireless, electromagnetic fields, or high
frequency transmitter, or
auditory injury caused by over stimulation of the
ear by excessive peaks or sustained loud sound,
leading to physical or nerve damage.

Safety Requirements, UL
62368-1
0.11 Radiation-caused injury
The basic safeguard against radiation-caused injury

is containment of the energy within an enclosure


that is opaque to the radiated energy.
The basic safeguard against auditory injury is the
provision of warnings and information advising the
user how to use the equipment correctly.
Examples of basic safeguards against auditory pain and

injury are the provision of warnings and information advising


the user how to use the equipment correctly.
Examples of supplementary safeguards against auditory
injury are the provision of a safety interlock or a
soundproof enclosure.
There are several supplementary safeguards against
radiation-caused injury. The supplementary safeguards
may include safety interlocks to disconnect power to the
generator, tamper-proof screws to prevent unauthorized
access, etc.

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