Technical data
316  •  Use in Hazardous Environments 
 Foreword 
 WAGO-I/O-SYSTEM 750 
BACnet/IP Controller 
9  Use in Hazardous Environments 
9.1 Foreword 
Today’s development shows that many chemical and petrochemical 
companies have production plants, production, and process automation 
machines in operation which use gas-air, vapor-air and dust-air mixtures 
which can be explosive. For this reason, the electrical components used in 
such plants and systems must not pose a risk of explosion resulting in injury to 
persons or damage to property. This is backed by law, directives or regulations 
on a national and international scale. WAGO-I/O-SYSTEM 750 (electrical 
components) is designed for use in zone 2 explosive environments. The 
following basic explosion protection related terms have been defined. 
9.2 Protective Measures 
Primarily, explosion protection describes how to prevent the formation of an 
explosive atmosphere. For instance by avoiding the use of combustible 
materials, reducing the concentration levels, ventilation measures, to name but 
a few. But there are a large number of applications, which do not allow the 
implementation of primary protection measures. In such cases, the secondary 
explosion protection comes into play. Following is a detailed description of 
such secondary measures. 
9.3  Classification Meeting CENELEC and IEC 
The specifications outlined here are valid for use in Europe and are based on 
the following standards: EN60079... of CENELEC (European Committee for 
Electrotechnical Standardization). On an international scale, these are 
reflected by the IEC 60079-... standards of the IEC (I
nternational 
Electrotechnical Commission). 
9.3.1 Divisions 
Explosive environments are areas in which the atmosphere can potentially 
become explosive. The term explosive means a special mixture of ignitable 
substances existing in the form of air-borne gases, fumes, mist or dust under 
atmospheric conditions which, when heated beyond a tolerable temperature or 
subjected to an electric arc or sparks, can produce explosions. Explosive zones 
have been created to describe the concentrations level of an explosive 
atmosphere. This division, based on the probability of an explosion occurring, 
is of great importance both for technical safety and feasibility reasons. 
Knowing that the demands placed on electrical components permanently 
employed in an explosive environment have to be much more stringent than 
those placed on electrical components that are only rarely and, if at all, for 
short periods, subject to a dangerous explosive environment. 










