Questions and Answers About SF6
Questions and Answers About SF6
What Is SF6?
Sulphur hexafluoride. SF6 is a gas that is used in electrical power equipment. It is colourless, odourless,
non-flammable and chemically stable. This means that at room temperature it does not react with any
other substance. Stability comes from the symmetrical arrangement of the six fluorine atoms around the
central sulphur atom. And this stability is just what makes the gas useful in electric equipment. SF6 is a
very good electrical insulator and can effectively extinguish arcs, which makes high and medium voltage
apparatus filled with SF6 highly popular. SF6 can be found in millions of electric apparatus all over the
world; electrical equipment containing SF6 is a large export article.
SF6 is formed by a chemical reaction between molten sulphur and fluorine. Fluorine is obtained by the
electrolysis of hydrofluoric acid (HF).
Pure SF6 is not poisonous. The gas is not dangerous to inhale, provided the oxygen content is high
enough. In principle you can inhale a mixture of 20% oxygen and 80% SF6 without danger. SF6 is about
6 times heavier than air. That means that it may collect in cable ducts or at the bottom of tanks. The gas
is not dangerous to inhale but if it does accumulate where people work, there is a risk of suffocation due
to the lack of oxygen.
SF6 is a non-flammable gas that is used in electrical apparatus.
SF6 is not poisonous.
Is SF6 Dangerous?
Since SF6 came into use, nearly 50 years ago, a small amount of gas has leaked into the atmosphere.
Currently there area round 0.000´000´000´003 parts (by volume) of SF6 in the atmosphere.
The stability of the gas means it will stay in the atmosphere for a long time.
Some gases that are released destroy the ozone layer. Thinning of the ozone layer means that more
ultraviolet light can get to the ground, increasing the risk of skin cancer. The gases that affect the ozone
layer all contain chlorine. SF6 does not contain any chlorine and does not affect the ozone layer.
The term “greenhouse effect“ is used to describe that the atmosphere is slowly warming up due to man-
made gas emissions. Some gas molecules in the atmosphere, principally carbon dioxide (CO2) and
methane (CH4) reflect long wave-length heat radiation from the earth so that heat remains trapped in the
atmosphere instead of disappearing into outer space.
The SF6 molecule is very reflective and contributes to the greenhouse effect. But the concentration of
the gas is extremely low (0.000´000´000´003 by volume). This means that the contribution of SF6 to the
man-made greenhouse effect is very little, less than 0.1 percent of the total effect. This should be
compared with carbon dioxide CO2 which contributes about 60%.
SF6 does not destroy the ozone layer.
The contribution of SF6 to the greenhouse effect is less than 0.1 percent of the total that mankind
generates.
Today‘s SF6 apparatus is very gas-tight and in normal operation only a small amount of the gas can leak
out. The gas is monitored continuously, and any leakage would be discovered at an early stage.
SF6 apparatus does not need much maintenance. In the rare case a gas-filled section of apparatus
needs to be opened, the gas is pumped into a container. After filtering, the gas can be used again and
put back into the apparatus. There is also equipment which allows us to handle gas in large quantities
(GIS substations) and also in smaller quantities, for example, in single circuit breakers.
Contaminated SF6 can be cleaned by a gas supplier and used again. If the gas is not required any more,
it can be destroyed by heating it together with limestone in a high temperature kiln. In this process it is
being transformed into the environmentally harmless and non-toxic natural products gypsum and
fluorspar.
It is ABB‘s policy that no SF6 gas should be released into the atmosphere. This applies to every time
SF6 apparatus is serviced, maintained or scrapped. We also design our equipment so that gas handling
is as easy as possible; we recommend suitable equipment and routines for the handling of the gas; and
we offer to take care of the gas when equipment with SF6 is to be scrapped.
SF6 can be cleaned and used again.
SF6 can easily be destroyed.
ABB‘s policy is that no SF6 gas should be released when equipment is erected, serviced or
scrapped.