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Washington Laboratories (301) 417-0220 web: www.wll.com7560 Lindbergh Dr. Gaithersburg, MD 20879 EMC – Safety WEEE – RoHS Compliance Overview Steve Ferguson.

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Presentation on theme: "Washington Laboratories (301) 417-0220 web: www.wll.com7560 Lindbergh Dr. Gaithersburg, MD 20879 EMC – Safety WEEE – RoHS Compliance Overview Steve Ferguson."— Presentation transcript:

1 Washington Laboratories (301) 417-0220 web: www.wll.com7560 Lindbergh Dr. Gaithersburg, MD 20879 EMC – Safety WEEE – RoHS Compliance Overview Steve Ferguson

2 Requirements Established by government legislation Administered by national and local government bodies Purpose: Provide for public safety Provide for operation of public communication and electronic systems

3 Safety concerns Electrical shock (contact, insulation breakdown) Energy related (burns, arcing, ejection of molten metal) Fire (fire spread) Thermal (contact burn, insulation breakdown, ignition) Mechanical (cuts, pinch, crush, equipment instability, particulate ejection) Radiation (sonic, RF, infra-red, ultraviolet, ionizing, high intensity visible) Chemical (contact, inhalation)

4 WEEE-RoHS concerns Exposure to hazardous materials Air contamination (inhalation) Contact (transfer of contamination) Ingestion (water, etc.) Waste control Management of waste volume Recycling of natural resources

5 EMC concerns Emissions Potential for interference to electronic equipment Exposure to radiated energy Immunity (Susceptibility) Operation impact from man-made and natural RF energy

6 Safety compliance - US NRTL Products evaluated to specific safety criteria and listed by the approved laboratory Ongoing service agreement to assure that listed item maintains conformity Production testing for critical elements Electric strength (hi-pot) Protective earth continuity (ground impedance) FDA Products considered medical are evaluated by the FDA through 510K application

7 Safety compliance - CE Directives Machinery directive (98/37/EC)  calls out safety & EMC Low voltage directive (73/23/EC) Medical device directive (93/42/EEC)  calls out safety and EMC Products evaluated to specific safety criteria for: Electrical hazards (shock, energy) Fire hazards (initiating fire, containment) Burn hazards (access, ignition, insulation breakdown) Mechanical hazards (access to moving parts, particulate ejection) Radiation hazards (noise, laser, x-ray, etc.) Chemical hazards (containment, ventilation) Product specific standards are used Manufacturer declares conformity and is responsible to maintain the conformity Many other directives (toys, pressure vessels, etc.) are active and may apply in conjunction or be specified as clauses

8 WEEE-RoHS compliance US National legislation not in effect State governments enacting legislation California leading Others have some activity Europe Directives in effect Details in WEEE-RoHS presentation later today

9 EMC compliance - US FCC US commercial Applies to Unintentional emitters RF transmitters Regulates emissions (not immunity) CFR 47, Part 15 ITE/Digital Devices (CIPSR 22 satisfies requirements) Receivers Unlicensed transmitters CFR47, Parts ---- Specific parts for designated applications Part 22 - Cellular devices Part 90 - Licensed private land mobile radio Others (Television, Satellite, Education, Amateur, etc.) FCC OET Bulletin 65, Supplement C RF Exposure Levels to Humans ACTA – Administrative Council for Terminal Attachments Telecommunications – Part 68

10 EMC Compliance - Canada Industry Canada Formally Dept. of Communications ICES-003 – unintentional emitters (US Part 15 harmonized) CS03 – telecommunications products RSS-210 – non-licensed RF products RSS-119 – Land Mobile and Fixed Radio

11 EMC Compliance - CE Directives EMC Directive 89/336/EEC (repeal 7/20/2007) 2004/108/EC (effective 7/20/2007) – conformity by 7/20/2009 R&TTE Directive 1999/5/EC Intentional emitters Telecom networks

12 EMC Compliance - Other Military MIL-STD-464A applies to systems MIL-STD-461 for equipment (called out by MIL-STD-464A) National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA Manual) Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) US Nuclear Regulatory Commission Regulatory Guide 1.180 currently in use Provides for dual path of compliance testing MIL-STD-461, previously used by EPRI TR-102323 IEC 61000 series of EMI/RFI test methods Both approaches impose more stringent requirements than commercial specifications and call out stringent test methods and limits Telecomm industry Bellcore (Telcordia) requirements for EMC, safety, environmental Each company amends with specific requirements

13 Safety evaluation basics General Are instructions provided for proper installation and operation? Do warnings and labels conform to standards? Electrical shock/energy Is access to shock hazards controlled? Does chassis damage permit access? Are components approved? Fire/Burn Does operation or a fault present a hazard? Is potential for fire spread controlled? Is access to hot surfaces prevented? Are components approved? Mechanical Is access to moving parts controlled? Is potential for flying debris controlled? Is the item stable? Radiation Is exposure to hazardous radiation controlled? Are components approved? Chemical Is exposure to chemicals controlled?

14 EMC emission evaluation basics General Are all potential modes of operation examined? Is the test article representative of production? Are cables in place that represent recommended? Intentional emitter Are emissions contained within the permitted frequency range? Is the transmit power limited to the maximum allowed? Does environmental conditions alter the performance? Are installation and operation instructions provided? Unintentional emitter Are radiated emission levels below the allowed threshold? Are conducted emission levels below the allowed threshold? Special Are particular emission modes applicable (e.g., magnetic fields)? Are harmonic and flicker levels below the allowed threshold?

15 EMC immunity evaluation basics Does the unit perform within tolerance when Exposed to ESD events? Exposed to RF radiated fields? Exposed to electrically fast transients on the cables? Exposed to induced lightning surge transients on the cables? Exposed to induced RF current on the cables? Exposed to magnetic fields? Exposed to power input voltage dips/interrupts? Power harmonic energy on the power input? Radiated transient energy? Is the performance criteria defined? Is there a method to monitor performance ?

16 Directive 2004/40/EC Deals with health and safety requirements regarding exposure of workers to risks arising from electromagnetic fields Compliance mandatory from 30 April 2008 Generic standard EN 50392 comes into force on 1 October 2006 but is not currently required for demonstrating compliance EN 50366 providing for magnetic field evaluation of household and similar appliances within the scope of the Low Voltage Directive became mandatory 1 February 2006

17 EMC Design The next speaker will be dealing with basics of EMC design


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