NEMA SBP 4-2015 Low-frequency Audible Signals.pdf
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1、NEMA Standards PublicationNational Electrical Manufacturers AssociationNEMA SBP 4-2015 Low-frequency Audible SignalsA NEMA Fire, Life Safety, Security, and Emergency Communication Section White Paper NEMA SBP 4-2015 Low-frequency Audible Signals Published by National Electrical Manufacturers Associa
2、tion 1300 North 17th Street, Suite 900 Rosslyn, Virginia 22209 www.nema.org 2015 National Electrical Manufacturers Association. All rights, including translation into other languages, reserved under the Universal Copyright Convention, the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic
3、Works, and the International and Pan American copyright conventions. NEMA SBP 4-2015 Page 2 2015 National Electrical Manufacturers Association Scope This white paper addresses the need for and development of the low-frequency audible signal used in fire alarms, carbon monoxide (CO) alarms, and fire
4、or CO alarm systems. It documents the signals waking effectiveness for hearing-impaired people, school-age children, and the elderly. It also summarizes the voluntary national consensus requirements for the application, installation, location, and performance for these products when employing the lo
5、w-frequency audible signal. Purpose The purpose of this white paper is to clear up confusion in the fire alarm industry related to application of the low-frequency audible alarm signal. It is ideally suited for installers, the fire service, building code officials, end users, fire protection enginee
6、rs, and electrical engineers. Introduction The majority of traditional fire or CO alarm notification appliances produce an audible signal with a frequency range between 2 kHz and 4 kHz. The traditional integral sounders used in almost all smoke or CO alarms also produce a 3 kHz audible alarm signal.
7、 By contrast, the low-frequency audible alarm signal has a fundamental frequency of 520 Hz. Researchers have been testing the effectiveness of various alarm signals and frequencies in waking various at-risk population subgroups. Much of this research has been conducted by Dr. Dorothy Bruck and her c
8、olleague Ian Thomas at Australias Victoria University. Their findings conclude that most unimpaired adults will normally awaken quickly to a 3 kHz audible alarm signal, and the low-frequency signal is most effective at waking high-risk segments of the population, such as people with hearing loss, th
9、e elderly, school-age children, and the alcohol impaired. Important Statistics Alarms and alarm systems provide life-saving value when occupants are awake, but their greatest benefit might be when the occupants are asleep. This is illustrated in a 2010 U.S. Fire Administration (USFA) study1, which r
10、eports that 50% of fire fatalities in residential buildings occur between the hours of 10:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m., when most people are sleeping. According to a 2008 study2, most unimpaired adults wake up quickly to the “standard” 2-4 kHz audible fire alarm signal, even at levels well below 75 dBA. Bu
11、t 13%of fire fatalities in residential buildings involve children younger than 10 years old, and 44% of fire fatalities are adults between the ages of 40 and 69. Also, according to another study3, there are more than 34.5 million hearing-impaired people in the US. Research on Waking Effectiveness of
12、 Audible Alarm Signals For more than a decade, researchers have been testing the effectiveness of audible fire alarm signals at waking various at-risk population groups. The National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) Fire Protection Research Foundation has been instrumental in funding many of these
13、 studies. The 2008 report concludes that most unimpaired adults will wake quickly to the sounding of their smoke alarm, even at levels well below 75 dBA, the level at the pillow required by code. However, a number of groups might not wake as quickly, including people over 65, the hearing impaired, t
14、he alcohol impaired, and children. 1 Federal Emergency Management Agency, U.S. Fire Administration, Civilian Fire Fatalities in Residential Buildings (2008-2010), Topical Fire Report Series, Vol. 13, No. 1, Emmitsburg, Maryland. 2 Ian R. Thomas and Dorothy Bruck, Awakening of Sleeping People: a Deca
15、de of Research (Melbourne, Australia: Centre for Environmental Safety and Risk Engineering), 2008. 3 Ian R. Thomas and Dorothy Bruck, Waking Effectiveness of Alarms for Adults Who Are Hard of Hearing (Melbourne, Australia: Victoria University), National Fire Protection Association, 2007. NEMA SBP 4-
16、2015 Page 3 2015 National Electrical Manufacturers Association A series of tests was conducted with different groups of subjects. Variables included sound intensity (in dB) and frequency (in Hz) of the alarm signal, as well as other stimuli, including voice, strobe lights, and bed and pillow shakers
17、. Each test was constructed differently, so the findings between them are not directly comparable, but they were consistent over multiple studies. They showed the waking effectiveness of the 520 Hz signal with appropriate harmonics, as explained in Underwriters Laboratories LLC (UL) Product Standard
18、s section, was superior to that of the ”standard” alarm signal, as follows: a) Six to ten times more effective at waking children. b) Six to ten times more effective at waking young adults, both sober and with .05 blood alcohol level. c) Six times more effective at waking adults with hearing loss. W
19、hile a mothers voice might be effective at waking a child, voice was not a universally successful stimulus and presented particular problems for nonEnglish-speaking participants. More recent research, also by Dr. Bruck, with colleagues Chris Lykiardopoulos and Michelle Ball, confirms similar results
20、 with “hypnotics” (i.e., sleep-inducing drugs). This work had not yet been published at the time this white paper was published. Low Frequency Requirements in NFPA 72, The National Fire Alarm and Signaling Code, 2013 Edition Chapter 18 covers notification appliances that are connected to a protected
21、 premises fire alarm system. Effective January 1, 2014, section 18.4.5.3 requires that audible notification appliances installed in all sleeping areas produce a low-frequency audible alarm signal. Chapter 29 covers single- and multiple-station smoke alarms and household fire alarm systems. Unlike 18
22、.4.5.3, section 29.3.8 requires a low-frequency audible alarm signal in sleeping rooms and guest rooms only for those with mild to severe hearing loss or where required by a local law or code. The effect of 29.3.8 is that when smoke alarms and household fire alarm systems are installed in sleeping r
23、ooms, the low-frequency audible alarm signal is required only when the person with the mild to severe hearing loss chooses it. Low Frequency Requirements in NFPA 720, Standard for the Installation of Carbon Monoxide (CO) Detection and Warning Equipment, 2015 Edition NFPA 720 chapter 6 covers notific
24、ation appliances connected to a protected premises CO detection system. Effective January 1, 2015, audible appliances provided for the sleeping areas will be required to produce a low-frequency audible alarm. The scope of chapter 9 covers “Single- and Multiple-Station Alarms and Household Carbon Mon
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