Flameproof Emergency Light Wattage & Battery Backup Selection Guide

Engineering Framework for Hazardous Industrial Areas (Zone 1 & Zone 2)

Flameproof emergency lighting is an essential safety system in hazardous areas where explosive gases, vapours, or dust may be present. In chemical plants, refineries, offshore platforms, solvent processing units, battery charging rooms, and tank farms, emergency lighting ensures safe evacuation, operational shutdown visibility, and compliance with statutory safety requirements during power failure.

Many installations pass equipment certification but fail safety audits due to incorrect wattage selection and insufficient battery backup. This guide explains how to correctly select wattage, lux level, autonomy duration, and battery type for hazardous environments using engineering principles rather than assumptions.

To understand hazardous zone fundamentals, refer to A Comprehensive Guide to Zone 0, Zone 1, Zone 2 & Zone 3 in Hazardous Areas.

Use 10–18W for narrow corridors and small rooms, 30–40W for production walkways, and 60–100W for high-bay process halls or outdoor tank farms. Minimum backup should be 90 minutes, but hazardous chemical & petroleum plants typically require 2–3 hours.

LiFePO4 batteries are preferred in 2025 due to higher cycle life, stable discharge, and temperature resilience.

Explore certified models: Flameproof LED Emergency Lights (30W & 60W)

1. Lux-Level Requirements for Hazardous Industrial Areas

Emergency light wattage must be selected based on the required illumination (Lux) for safe movement and hazard visibility.

Area Type

Minimum Lux

Typical Wattage

Escape paths & corridors

1–5 lux

10–18W

Staircases & exits

5–10 lux

18–30W

General plant walkways

10–20 lux

30–40W

High-bay process areas

20–50 lux

60–80W

Outdoor tank farms & jetties

15–30 lux

80–100W

For standard lighting requirements, refer to Flameproof LED Flood Light

2. Wattage Selection by Area Size & Mounting Height

Area Size

Mounting Height

Recommended Wattage

< 100 sq ft

2.5–3 m

10–18W

100–250 sq ft

3–4 m

18–30W

250–600 sq ft

4–5 m

30–40W

600–1200 sq ft

5–7 m

60–80W

3. Master Selection Table

Area Type

Area Size

Mounting Height

Min. Lux

Recommended Wattage

Recommended Backup

Battery Type

Small Lab / MCC Room

< 100 sq ft

2.5–3 m

5–10

10–18W

90–120 min

LiFePO4

Production Corridor

100–400 sq ft

3–4 m

10–15

30–40W

2 hours

LiFePO4

Process Hall / Warehouse

400–1000 sq ft

5–7 m

20–30

60–80W

2–3 hours

LiFePO4

Outdoor Tank Farm / Jetty

Open Area

7–10 m

15–30

80–100W

3–4 hours

LiFePO4

4. Battery Backup Duration – Engineering Logic

Plant Type

Recommended Autonomy

Pharmaceutical

90–120 minutes

Chemical production

2 hours

Petroleum & refinery

2–3 hours

Offshore / gas processing

3–4 hours

Confined space

4 hours

5. Self-Contained vs Central Battery Systems

Type

Benefits

Limitations

Self-Contained Flameproof Fittings

Independent & easy

Higher per-unit cost

Central Battery

One system supports many

Complex wiring, single-point failure

6. Placement Rules

Requirement

Best Practice

Install the above exits, stairs, and pathway turns

Mandatory

Max spacing

8–10 metres

Avoid glare

Tilt downward

Use flameproof exit signs

Required

For compliant safety signage, see Flameproof LED Exit Signage

Real Case Example

A 2024 shutdown incident in a Maharashtra solvent plant left a 110m corridor dark when 10W emergency fittings failed. After upgrading to 60W LiFePO4 flameproof emergency lights, evacuation time dropped from 6 minutes to 120 seconds, meeting PESO safety expectations.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can normal emergency lights be used in Zone 2?
 
No. All devices must be explosion-proof.
  Learn more in What Is the Difference Between Explosion-Proof and Flameproof?

Do emergency lights require Ex certification?
 
Yes. See: What Is Flameproof Equipment?

Conclusion

Correct selection of flameproof emergency lighting is a life safety and compliance decision, not a commodity purchase. Proper wattage, battery autonomy, placement, and testing define safe evacuation and audit success.