Actually, it comes from ANSI C37.04! But please note that it is the asymmetrical (rms)-to-symetrical (rms) current. It is not, repeat, not the first-cycle peak.
A transient recovery voltage (or TRV) for high-voltage circuit breakers is the voltage that appears across the terminals after current interruption. It is a critical parameter for fault interruption by a high-voltage circuit breaker, its characteristics (amplitude, rate of rise) can lead either to a successful current interruption or to a failure (called reignition or restrike).
The TRV is dependent on the characteristics of the system connected on both terminals of the circuit-breaker, and on the type of fault that this circuit breaker has to interrupt (single, double or three-phase faults, grounded or ungrounded fault).
Characteristics of the system include:
- Type of neutral (effectively grounded, ungrounded, solidly grounded)
- Type of load (capacitive, inductive, resistive)
- Type of connection: cable connected, line connected
The most severe TRV is applied on the first pole of a circuit breaker that interrupts current (called the first-pole-to-clear in a three-phase system).
First pole to clear factor is the ratio of distance between faulty phase and healthy phase to the faulty phase. The value should not come more than 1.5.