Medium Voltage Switchgear Design: 4.16kV & 13.8kV Systems That Keep Large Facilities Running

When a facility's electrical demand exceeds 3 MVA, low voltage distribution becomes impractical " cable sizes explode, voltage drop becomes unmanageable, and fault currents exceed equipment ratings. The solution is medium voltage (MV) distribution at 4.16kV or 13.8kV. But MV design is a different discipline with higher stakes: arc flash energies measured in megajoules, protection relays instead of breakers, and clearance requirements that dictate entire room layouts.

Medium voltage switchgear lineup in electrical substation

When Do You Need Medium Voltage?

The transition from low voltage (600V) to medium voltage is driven by economics and physics:

Facility Load Recommended Voltage Typical Application
< 1 MVA 600V Small commercial, retail
1"3 MVA 600V or 4.16kV Mid-size commercial, institutional
3"10 MVA 4.16kV Large commercial, hospitals, campuses
10"50 MVA 13.8kV Heavy industrial, data centers, high-rises
> 50 MVA 27.6kV or 44kV Mining, large manufacturing, utility sub-transmission
"The cost crossover point is approximately 2"3 MVA. Below that, LV distribution is more economical. Above it, MV distribution saves money on cable, reduces losses, and improves voltage regulation " despite the higher cost of MV equipment."

Switchgear Types: Metal-Clad vs. Metal-Enclosed

Not all MV switchgear is created equal. IEEE C37.20 defines three construction types:

Feature Metal-Clad (C37.20.2) Metal-Enclosed (C37.20.3)
Breaker type Draw-out (rackable) Fixed or removable
Compartmentalization All compartments grounded metal barriers Barriers may be non-metallic
Bus bars Fully insulated, enclosed May be bare or partially insulated
Shutters Automatic shutters when breaker withdrawn Not required
Voltage class 4.16kV " 38kV 4.16kV " 38kV
Arc resistance Available (IEEE C37.20.7) Limited options
Cost Higher Lower
Best for Mission-critical, hospitals, data centers Industrial, less critical applications

Design recommendation: For any facility where downtime is costly (healthcare, data centers, manufacturing), always specify metal-clad switchgear. The draw-out breakers enable maintenance without de-energizing the bus " critical for facilities that can't tolerate shutdowns.

MV Protection: Relays, Not Breakers

Unlike low voltage where the breaker senses and trips itself, MV systems use a separate relay + breaker architecture:

  • Current Transformers (CTs) " sense line current and feed proportional signal to relays
  • Voltage Transformers (VTs/PTs) " step down MV to 120V for metering and relay sensing
  • Protective relays " microprocessor-based devices (SEL, GE Multilin, ABB) that execute protection functions (50/51, 27, 59, 81, 87)
  • MV circuit breaker " vacuum or SF6 interrupting mechanism, rated for 250"40,000A fault current

Common MV Relay Functions

ANSI Code Function Purpose
50 Instantaneous overcurrent Fast trip for close-in faults
51 Time overcurrent Coordinated protection with downstream devices
27 Undervoltage Detect voltage sags, loss of source
59 Overvoltage Protect against voltage swells
81 Frequency Under/over frequency protection
87 Differential Transformer/bus differential protection (fastest)
25 Sync check Verify synchronism before paralleling sources

Arc Flash at Medium Voltage

Arc flash at MV is orders of magnitude more dangerous than at 600V. Incident energy levels routinely exceed 40 cal/cm² " well beyond the protection capability of standard PPE:

Voltage Typical Incident Energy Arc Flash Boundary
208/600V LV panelboard 1"8 cal/cm² 3"6 ft
4.16kV switchgear 15"40 cal/cm² 15"25 ft
13.8kV switchgear 30"80+ cal/cm² 25"50+ ft

Arc-resistant switchgear (IEEE C37.20.7) is designed to redirect arc flash energy through top-mounted flaps, away from personnel. It reduces incident energy at the operator position to < 1.2 cal/cm² regardless of the available fault energy. For any new MV installation, arc-resistant construction should be standard.

Electrical Room Requirements for MV

MV switchgear rooms have stringent requirements per CEC Section 26 and CSA Z462:

  • Working clearance: Minimum 1.5m (5 ft) in front of equipment, increased for higher voltages
  • Rear access: If rear-accessible, minimum 900mm clearance behind switchgear
  • Two exits: Required for rooms with equipment rated > 1200A or > 6 ft wide
  • Doors: Must open outward, equipped with panic hardware
  • Fire rating: 2-hour fire-rated separation from adjacent spaces
  • Ventilation: Forced ventilation to remove heat dissipation (typically 5"15 kW per lineup)
  • Floor loading: MV switchgear weighs 2,000"5,000 kg per section " structural review required

4.16kV vs. 13.8kV: Which to Choose?

Factor 4.16 kV 13.8 kV
Utility supply voltage Requires step-down from utility MV Often matches utility supply directly
Cable cost Moderate Lower (smaller cables for same power)
Motor availability Wide range (4.16kV motors common) Limited (mostly > 500 HP)
Distribution reach Up to ~2 km effectively Up to ~10 km effectively
Arc flash energy Lower Higher (needs arc-resistant design)
Best for Campus distribution, hospitals Heavy industry, large campuses, data centers
Disclaimer: This article provides general engineering guidance for educational purposes. Always verify requirements against IEEE C37.20, CSA C22.1 (CEC), CSA Z462, and applicable utility standards. Medium voltage design must be performed by qualified Professional Engineers with specific MV experience.

Frequently Asked Questions

When is medium voltage switchgear required?
Medium voltage switchgear is typically required when building loads exceed 1,500 kVA or when the utility service entrance is at 4.16kV, 13.8kV, or 27.6kV.
What is the difference between metal-clad and metal-enclosed switchgear?
Metal-clad switchgear has each compartment separated by grounded metal barriers providing the highest fault protection. Metal-enclosed uses barriers but not necessarily grounded partitions.
What are the arc flash risks at medium voltage?
Arc flash energy at medium voltage can exceed 40 cal/cm², requiring Category 4 PPE and engineered controls such as arc-resistant switchgear and high-speed relay protection.

Need Medium Voltage Engineering?

ETEM Engineering designs medium voltage power distribution systems for hospitals, data centers, industrial facilities, and campus infrastructure. From switchgear specification to relay coordination and arc flash studies " we deliver complete MV solutions.

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