Have you ever seen a label reading “II 2G Ex db IIC T4 Gb” on an electric motor at a refinery? Or encountered specifications requiring “equipment must have Ex ia IIC T6 Ga certification”?
To the uninitiated, these codes look like complex chemical formulas. Yet every letter and number in an ATEX marking has a specific, safety-critical meaning. Misreading these codes can be fatal—installing the wrong equipment in a hazardous area can cause catastrophic explosions.
This article provides a complete breakdown of how to read ATEX certification codes, with reference tables, real industrial examples, and practical guidance to ensure you select the right equipment every time.
What is ATEX and Why Does It Matter?
ATEX (ATmosphères EXplosibles) is the European certification system for equipment used in potentially explosive atmospheres. While European in origin, ATEX is globally recognized because:
- Technical equivalence to IEC standards (basis for most national standards)
- Rigorous testing and quality requirements
- Widespread availability of ATEX-certified equipment
- International project acceptance in oil & gas, petrochemical, pharmaceutical industries
- Clear, standardized marking system understood worldwide
Complete Anatomy of an ATEX Code
Let’s dissect the code “II 2G Ex db IIC T4 Gb” element by element:
┌────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ │
│ II 2 G Ex db IIC T4 Gb │
│ ─┬─ ─┬─ ─┬─ ─┬─ ─┬─ ─┬── ─┬─ ─┬─ │
│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ └─ EPL │
│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ (Equipment │
│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ Protection │
│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ Level) │
│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
│ │ │ │ │ │ │ └─ Temperature │
│ │ │ │ │ │ │ Class │
│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
│ │ │ │ │ │ └─ Gas Group │
│ │ │ │ │ │ │
│ │ │ │ │ └─ Protection Type │
│ │ │ │ │ & Level │
│ │ │ │ │ │
│ │ │ │ └─ Explosion Protected │
│ │ │ │ │
│ │ │ └─ Atmosphere Type │
│ │ │ (Gas or Dust) │
│ │ │ │
│ │ └─ Equipment Category │
│ │ │
│ └─ Equipment Group │
│ │
└────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Now let’s examine each element in detail.
Element 1: Equipment Group (I, II, or III)
Equipment Group Classification Table
| Group | Application | Description | Typical Hazards | Industry Examples |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | Underground mining | Coal mines with firedamp risk | Methane (CH₄) | Underground coal mining |
| II | Surface industries – Gas/Vapor | All above-ground gas/vapor hazards | Various HC gases | Refineries, chemical plants, gas stations |
| III | Surface industries – Dust | Combustible dust environments | Explosive dusts | Flour mills, grain silos, pharma plants |
Group II Subdivisions (for Gases)
| Subgroup | MESG Range | MIC Ratio | Hazard Level | Representative Gases | Typical Industries |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IIA | >0.9 mm | >0.8 | Lowest | Propane, Methane, Gasoline, Acetone | Fuel depots, gas stations |
| IIB | 0.5-0.9 mm | 0.45-0.8 | Moderate | Ethylene, H₂S, Diethyl ether | Petrochemical plants, refineries |
| IIC | <0.5 mm | <0.45 | Highest | Hydrogen, Acetylene, Carbon disulfide | Hydrogen plants, welding shops |
Group III Subdivisions (for Dust)
| Subgroup | Material Type | Electrical Conductivity | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| IIIA | Combustible flyings/fibers | Variable | Cotton fibers, rayon |
| IIIB | Non-conductive dust | >10³ Ω·m | Flour, sugar, wood dust |
| IIIC | Conductive dust | <10³ Ω·m | Aluminum powder, carbon black |
📌 Key Point: Equipment Group determines the basic application environment. Most industrial facilities use Group II equipment.
Element 2: Equipment Category (1, 2, or 3)
Category vs Zone Suitability Matrix
| Category | Protection Level | Gas Zones | Dust Zones | Fault Tolerance | Design Philosophy | Relative Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Very High | 0, 1, 2 | 20, 21, 22 | 2 independent faults | Remain safe even with rare malfunctions | Highest |
| 2 | High | 1, 2 | 21, 22 | 1 fault | Safe during expected faults | High |
| 3 | Normal | 2 only | 22 only | Normal operation | Safe during normal operation only | Standard |
Category Selection Guide
| If Your Area is… | You Need Minimum… | Typical Equipment | Safety Factor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zone 0/20 | Category 1 | Intrinsically safe sensors | Triple redundancy |
| Zone 1/21 | Category 2 | Flameproof motors, Ex d lights | Double safety |
| Zone 2/22 | Category 3 | Non-sparking equipment | Single safety |
📌 Important Rule: Higher categories CAN be used in lower-risk zones (Category 1 works everywhere), but NOT vice versa.
Element 3: Atmosphere Type (G or D)
Gas vs Dust Atmosphere Designation
| Code | Full Name | Atmosphere Type | Zone System | Typical Industries |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| G | Gas | Flammable gases and vapors | Zone 0, 1, 2 | Oil & gas, petrochemical, pharmaceutical |
| D | Dust | Combustible dusts | Zone 20, 21, 22 | Food processing, wood industry, metal powder |
| GD | Gas + Dust | Both hazards present | Both systems | Sugar refineries (alcohol vapors + sugar dust) |
Combined Marking Examples
II 2 G ← Gas atmosphere only
II 2 D ← Dust atmosphere only
II 2 GD ← Both gas AND dust atmospheres
Element 4: The “Ex” Symbol
The “Ex” symbol confirms the equipment is certified for explosive atmospheres.
Ex Symbol Variations and History
| Symbol | Meaning | Usage Period | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ex | Current IEC/ATEX standard | 2003-present | Current standard |
| EEx | Old European standard | Pre-2003 | Obsolete – equipment may need replacement |
| AEx | American adoption of IEC zones | Current | Used in NEC 505/506 |
⚠️ Warning: Equipment marked “EEx” is based on pre-2003 standards. Consider replacement or re-certification.
Element 5: Protection Type (The Most Critical Element)
This element explains HOW the equipment prevents ignition.
Complete Protection Type Reference Table
| Code | Protection Method | Principle | Gas Zones | Dust Zones | Power Range | Typical Applications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| d | Flameproof Enclosure | Contains internal explosion | 1, 2 | – | Unlimited | Motors, junction boxes, switches |
| e | Increased Safety | Prevents sparks and hot spots | 1, 2 | – | Unlimited | Terminal boxes, squirrel cage motors |
| i | Intrinsic Safety | Limits electrical energy | 0, 1, 2 | 20, 21, 22 | <2W typical | Sensors, transmitters, handhelds |
| p | Pressurization/Purging | Keeps explosive atmosphere out | 1, 2 | 21, 22 | Unlimited | Control panels, analyzers, large motors |
| m | Encapsulation | Components sealed in compound | 0, 1, 2 | 20, 21, 22 | Limited | Solenoid valves, small electronics |
| o | Oil Immersion | Submerged in protective oil | 1, 2 | – | High | Transformers, switchgear |
| q | Powder/Sand Filling | Surrounded by quartz powder | 1, 2 | – | Limited | Capacitors, electronic assemblies |
| n | Non-Sparking | Various Zone 2 techniques | 2 only | – | Unlimited | General Zone 2 equipment |
| t | Dust Protection | Dust-tight enclosure | – | 20, 21, 22 | Unlimited | All equipment in dust areas |
| s | Special Protection | Non-standard methods | Per cert | Per cert | Various | Custom solutions |
Protection Type Levels (Subdivisions)
Many protection types have sub-levels indicating different degrees of protection:
Flameproof (d) Levels
| Level | Code | Application | Zone Suitability | Typical Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Level a | da | Highest (rare) | Zone 0 (special cases) | Very rare, special applications |
| Level b | db | Standard | Zone 1, 2 | Most common industrial |
| Level c | dc | Basic | Zone 2 only | Light duty, Zone 2 specific |
Intrinsic Safety (i) Levels
| Level | Code | Fault Tolerance | Zone Suitability | Live Maintenance | Energy Limits |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Level a | ia | 2 countable faults + 1.5 safety factor | 0, 1, 2 | Permitted in Zone 0 | Most restrictive |
| Level b | ib | 1 countable fault + 1.5 safety factor | 1, 2 | Permitted in Zone 1 | Moderate |
| Level c | ic | Normal operation + 1.5 safety factor | 2 only | Not in hazardous area | Least restrictive |
Encapsulation (m) Levels
| Level | Code | Zone Suitability | Fault Tolerance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Level a | ma | Zone 0, 20 | 2 faults |
| Level b | mb | Zone 1, 21 | 1 fault |
| Level c | mc | Zone 2, 22 | Normal operation |
Combined Protection Types
Equipment can use MULTIPLE protection methods:
| Combination | Example Marking | Explanation | Common Application |
|---|---|---|---|
| de | Ex de IIB T4 | Flameproof + Increased Safety | Motors with terminal boxes |
| db eb | Ex db eb IIC T4 | Flameproof (b) + Increased Safety (b) | Modern motor design |
| ia ma | Ex ia ma IIC T6 | Intrinsic Safety (a) + Encapsulation (a) | Ultra-safe sensors |
| px/py/pz | Ex pxb IIC T3 | Pressurized enclosure with internal Ex d | Large analyzer houses |
Element 6: Gas Group (IIA, IIB, or IIC)
Gas Group Properties and Hierarchy
| Gas Group | MESG Range | MIC Ratio | Hazard Level | Typical Gases | Selection Rule |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IIA | >0.9 mm | >0.8 | Lowest | Methane, Propane, Gasoline, Acetone | Equipment for IIA only |
| IIB | 0.5-0.9 mm | 0.45-0.8 | Moderate | Ethylene, H₂S, Diethyl ether | Equipment for IIB + IIA |
| IIC | <0.5 mm | <0.45 | Highest | Hydrogen, Acetylene, CS₂ | Equipment for ALL gases |
Gas Group Hierarchy Visualization
┌─────────────────────────────────── ──┐
│ IIC │ ← Suitable for ALL gases
│ ┌─────────────────────────┐ │
│ │ IIB │ │ ← Suitable for IIB + IIA
│ │ ┌─────────────┐ │ │
│ │ │ IIA │ │ │ ← Suitable for IIA only
│ │ └─────────────┘ │ │
│ └─────────────────────────┘ │
└──────────────────────────────────────┘
Common Industrial Gases Reference
| Gas/Vapor | Gas Group | MESG (mm) | MIC Ratio | AIT (°C) | Typical Location |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acetone | IIA | 1.04 | 0.88 | 465 | Laboratories, paint shops |
| Acetylene | IIC | 0.37 | 0.17 | 305 | Welding areas |
| Ammonia | IIA | 3.17 | 0.89 | 630 | Refrigeration, fertilizer plants |
| Benzene | IIA | 0.99 | 0.88 | 498 | Chemical plants |
| Butane | IIA | 0.98 | 0.82 | 365 | LPG facilities |
| Carbon Disulfide | IIC | 0.34 | 0.29 | 95 | Rayon manufacturing |
| Diesel | IIA | ~1.0 | ~0.85 | 225 | Fuel depots |
| Ethanol | IIB | 0.89 | 0.79 | 363 | Distilleries, pharma |
| Ethylene | IIB | 0.65 | 0.66 | 425 | Petrochemical plants |
| Gasoline | IIA | 0.91 | 0.82 | 280 | Gas stations, refineries |
| Hydrogen | IIC | 0.29 | 0.21 | 560 | Hydrogen plants, batteries |
| Hydrogen Sulfide | IIB | 0.71 | 0.66 | 260 | Sour gas processing |
| Methane | IIA | 1.14 | 1.00 | 595 | Natural gas facilities |
| Propane | IIA | 0.92 | 0.82 | 450 | LPG storage |
Element 7: Temperature Class (T1 through T6)
Temperature Classification Table
| T-Class | Max Surface Temperature | Safe for Gases with AIT > | Common Gases in Range | Safety Margin |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| T1 | 450°C (842°F) | 450°C | Hydrogen (560°C), Methane (595°C), Ammonia (630°C) | Large |
| T2 | 300°C (572°F) | 300°C | Ethylene (425°C), Ethanol (363°C), Acetylene (305°C) | Moderate |
| T3 | 200°C (392°F) | 200°C | Gasoline (280°C), Diesel (225°C), Kerosene (210°C) | Adequate |
| T4 | 135°C (275°F) | 135°C | Diethyl Ether (160°C), Acetaldehyde (140°C) | Marginal |
| T5 | 100°C (212°F) | 100°C | – | Critical |
| T6 | 85°C (185°F) | 85°C | Carbon Disulfide (95°C) | Minimal |
Temperature Sub-Classes (Finer Resolution)
| Sub-Class | Max Surface Temp | Application |
|---|---|---|
| T2A | 280°C | Between T2 and T3 |
| T2B | 260°C | Special requirements |
| T2C | 230°C | Special requirements |
| T2D | 215°C | Special requirements |
| T3A | 180°C | Between T3 and T4 |
| T3B | 165°C | Special requirements |
| T3C | 160°C | Special requirements |
| T4A | 120°C | Between T4 and T5 |
Temperature Class Selection Guide
| Lowest AIT in Area | Minimum T-Class Required | Recommended Safety Margin |
|---|---|---|
| >450°C | T1 acceptable | >100°C margin |
| 300-450°C | T2 minimum | 50-100°C margin |
| 200-300°C | T3 minimum | 50-80°C margin |
| 135-200°C | T4 minimum | 25-50°C margin |
| 100-135°C | T5 minimum | 20-35°C margin |
| <100°C | T6 mandatory | >10°C margin |
📌 Critical Rule: When multiple gases are present, select T-Class based on the gas with the LOWEST auto-ignition temperature.
Element 8: EPL (Equipment Protection Level)
EPL for Gas Atmospheres
| EPL | Full Name | Protection Level | Zone Suitability | Equivalent Category | Fault Tolerance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ga | Gas level a | Very High | 0, 1, 2 | Category 1G | 2 faults |
| Gb | Gas level b | High | 1, 2 | Category 2G | 1 fault |
| Gc | Gas level c | Enhanced | 2 only | Category 3G | Normal operation |
EPL for Dust Atmospheres
| EPL | Full Name | Protection Level | Zone Suitability | Equivalent Category | Fault Tolerance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Da | Dust level a | Very High | 20, 21, 22 | Category 1D | 2 faults |
| Db | Dust level b | High | 21, 22 | Category 2D | 1 fault |
| Dc | Dust level c | Enhanced | 22 only | Category 3D | Normal operation |
EPL vs Zone Quick Reference
| Zone | Minimum EPL Required | Acceptable EPLs |
|---|---|---|
| Zone 0 | Ga | Ga only |
| Zone 1 | Gb | Ga, Gb |
| Zone 2 | Gc | Ga, Gb, Gc |
| Zone 20 | Da | Da only |
| Zone 21 | Db | Da, Db |
| Zone 22 | Dc | Da, Db, Dc |
Complete ATEX Code Decoding Examples
Example 1: Flameproof Motor for Refinery
Marking: II 2G Ex db IIC T4 Gb
| Element | Value | Meaning | Implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| II | Group II | Surface industries | Not for mining |
| 2G | Category 2, Gas | High protection for gas atmosphere | Suitable for Zone 1 |
| Ex | Explosion protected | Certified for hazardous areas | Meets ATEX standards |
| db | Flameproof level b | Contains internal explosion, standard level | Zone 1 and 2 suitable |
| IIC | Gas Group IIC | Suitable for ALL gases including hydrogen | Maximum versatility |
| T4 | Temperature Class 4 | Maximum surface temp 135°C | Safe for gases with AIT >135°C |
| Gb | EPL Gb | High protection level | Confirms Zone 1 and 2 use |
Conclusion: This motor is suitable for Zone 1 areas with any gas group, provided the gas auto-ignition temperature exceeds 135°C.
Example 2: Intrinsically Safe Transmitter
Marking: II 1G Ex ia IIC T6 Ga
| Element | Value | Meaning | Implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| II | Group II | Surface industries | Standard industrial |
| 1G | Category 1, Gas | Very high protection | Zone 0 suitable |
| Ex | Explosion protected | Certified Ex equipment | ATEX compliant |
| ia | Intrinsic Safety level a | Highest IS level, 2-fault tolerant | Live work in Zone 0 |
| IIC | Gas Group IIC | All gases including hydrogen | Universal application |
| T6 | Temperature Class 6 | Maximum 85°C surface | Suitable for CS₂ (95°C AIT) |
| Ga | EPL Ga | Very high protection | Confirms Zone 0, 1, 2 |
Conclusion: This transmitter can be installed INSIDE a tank (Zone 0) containing any flammable gas, including those with very low auto-ignition temperatures.
Example 3: LED Light for Flour Mill
Marking: II 2D Ex tb IIIC T80°C Db
| Element | Value | Meaning | Implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| II | Group II | Surface industries | Not mining |
| 2D | Category 2, Dust | High protection for dust | Zone 21 suitable |
| Ex | Explosion protected | Certified for explosive atmospheres | Dust-rated |
| tb | Dust protection level b | Dust-tight enclosure, standard level | IP6X minimum |
| IIIC | Dust Group IIIC | Conductive dusts | Includes metal powders |
| T80°C | Temperature 80°C | Maximum surface temperature | Direct temperature, not class |
| Db | EPL Db | High protection for dust | Zone 21 and 22 suitable |
Conclusion: This LED light is suitable for Zone 21 areas with conductive dust, with maximum surface temperature of 80°C.
Additional Nameplate Markings
Beyond the main code, equipment nameplates display additional important information:
Certification Information Table
| Marking | Meaning | Example | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| CE ⟨Ex⟩ | CE mark + ATEX symbol | Mandatory on all EU equipment | Legal requirement for Europe |
| Notified Body Number | Certification body ID | 0344 (DEKRA), 0123 (TÜV) | Identifies who certified |
| Certificate Number | Unique certificate ID | DEKRA 20 ATEX 1234 X | Traceable certification |
| Year Code | Year of certification | 20 = 2020, 21 = 2021 | Age of certification |
| Serial Number | Unique equipment ID | 2024-001234 | Individual traceability |
Special Condition Suffixes
| Suffix | Meaning | Action Required |
|---|---|---|
| X | Special conditions apply | MUST read certificate for conditions |
| U | Component (not complete equipment) | Requires additional certification when installed |
| (No suffix) | Standard conditions | Follow normal installation practices |
Common Special Conditions (X suffix)
Example Certificate: SIRA 02 ATEX 1234 X
Special Conditions of Safe Use:
1. Ambient temperature range: -20°C to +40°C only
2. Cable entries must use certified Ex d cable glands
3. Not suitable for use in acetylene atmospheres
4. Enclosure must be earthed via external earth terminal
5. Impact protection required (7J minimum)
Quick Reference Tables
Zone to Equipment Requirements
| Zone | Category | EPL | Common Protection Types | Typical Equipment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zone 0 | 1G | Ga | ia, ma, da (special) | IS transmitters |
| Zone 1 | 2G | Gb | d, e, ib, mb, p, o, q | Motors, lights, junction boxes |
| Zone 2 | 3G | Gc | n, ic, mc, all Zone 1 types | General electrical equipment |
| Zone 20 | 1D | Da | ta, ia, ma | Special dust equipment |
| Zone 21 | 2D | Db | tb, ib, mb, pb | Dust-proof motors, lights |
| Zone 22 | 3D | Dc | tc, ic, mc | Standard dust protection |
Protection Type Selection Guide
| Application | Recommended Protection | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| High-power motors | Ex d or Ex de | Unlimited power, robust |
| Instrumentation | Ex ia or Ex ib | Low power, live maintenance |
| Junction boxes | Ex e | No sparking components inside |
| Control panels | Ex p | Can house standard equipment |
| Solenoid valves | Ex m | Compact, vibration resistant |
| Zone 2 equipment | Ex n | Cost-effective for low-risk areas |
Common ATEX Marking Combinations
| Marking | Application | Explanation |
|---|---|---|
II 2G Ex db IIB T3 Gb | Standard Zone 1 motor | Flameproof motor for ethylene plants |
II 1G Ex ia IIC T4 Ga | Zone 0 transmitter | IS sensor for hydrogen service |
II 2G Ex e IIC T3 Gb | Zone 1 junction box | Increased safety terminals |
II 3G Ex nA IIC T3 Gc | Zone 2 motor | Non-sparking for low-risk areas |
II 2D Ex tb IIIC T125°C Db | Zone 21 equipment | Dust-tight for metal powders |
Common Mistakes When Reading ATEX Codes
Mistake 1: Ignoring Gas Group Hierarchy
❌ Wrong: “Ex d equipment is safe for all applications”
✅ Right: Must check gas group. Ex d IIA is NOT safe for hydrogen (requires IIC)
Mistake 2: Misunderstanding Temperature Classes
❌ Wrong: “T1 is the best because it’s number 1”
✅ Right: T6 (85°C) is most restrictive and safest for more gases
Mistake 3: Confusing Category with Zone
❌ Wrong: “Category 2 equipment can be used in Zone 0”
✅ Right: Zone 0 REQUIRES Category 1 (EPL Ga or Da)
Mistake 4: Ignoring Special Conditions (X)
❌ Wrong: “ATEX certified means fully approved”
✅ Right: ‘X’ suffix means special conditions that MUST be followed
Mistake 5: Mixing Gas and Dust Requirements
❌ Wrong: “Ex d works for dust areas too”
✅ Right: Dust requires specific protection (Ex t) with different testing
Practical Selection Guide
Equipment Selection Checklist
☐ Identify the Zone: What zone? (0/1/2 or 20/21/22)
☐ Determine hazardous material: Which gases or dusts?
☐ Check Gas Group: IIA, IIB, or IIC required?
☐ Calculate Temperature Class: What’s the lowest AIT?
☐ Select Protection Type: Based on application and zone
☐ Verify EPL: Ga/Gb/Gc or Da/Db/Dc appropriate?
☐ Check Ambient Temperature: Within equipment rating?
☐ Review Special Conditions: Any X suffix requirements?
☐ Confirm IP Rating: Adequate for environment?
☐ Verify Certification Currency: Standards still valid?
Sample Specification Text
For Zone 1 gasoline vapor area:
Electric motor shall have current ATEX certification with minimum:
- Equipment Group II, Category 2G
- Protection type Ex d or Ex de (flameproof or combined)
- Gas Group minimum IIA (suitable for gasoline vapor)
- Temperature Class minimum T3 (gasoline AIT = 280°C)
- EPL Gb
- Ambient temperature rating -20°C to +55°C minimum
- IP66 ingress protection minimum
- Certificate from EU Notified Body
- No unresolved special conditions affecting installation
ATEX vs Other Certification Systems
Comparison Table: ATEX vs IECEx vs NEC
| Aspect | ATEX (Europe) | IECEx (International) | NEC (USA) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zone Format | Zone 0,1,2 / 20,21,22 | Zone 0,1,2 / 20,21,22 | Division 1,2 or Zone |
| Gas Groups | IIA, IIB, IIC | IIA, IIB, IIC | Groups A,B,C,D |
| Equipment Groups | I, II, III | I, II, III | Class I, II, III |
| Temperature | T1-T6 classes | T1-T6 classes | T1-T6 or T-codes |
| Marking Example | II 2G Ex db IIC T4 Gb | Ex db IIC T4 Gb | Class I Div 1 Groups C,D T4 |
| Certificate Format | XXXX YY ATEX #### | IECEx XXX YY.#### | Various (UL, FM, CSA) |
| Legal Status | Mandatory in EU | Voluntary globally | Mandatory in USA/Canada |
| Technical Basis | EN 60079 (IEC based) | IEC 60079 | ANSI/UL/FM standards |
Real-World Case Studies
Case 1: Offshore Platform Equipment Selection
Situation: New gas compressor installation on North Sea platform
- Zone Classification: Zone 1 (near compressor seals)
- Gas Present: Natural gas (methane) + traces of H₂S
- Requirements:
- Gas Group: IIB minimum (due to H₂S)
- Temperature: T3 (methane AIT = 595°C, very safe)
- Selected:
II 2G Ex db IIB T3 Gbmotor
Case 2: Pharmaceutical Plant Upgrade
Situation: Ethanol distillation area equipment
- Zone Classification: Zone 1 (vapor release during transfer)
- Hazard: Ethanol vapor (IIB, AIT = 363°C)
- Selected Equipment:
- Lighting:
II 2G Ex db IIB T2 Gb - Instrumentation:
II 1G Ex ia IIB T2 Ga
- Lighting:
Case 3: Grain Storage Facility
Situation: Wheat flour handling system
- Zone Classification: Zone 21 (dust present during operations)
- Hazard: Flour dust (IIIB, non-conductive)
- Selected Equipment:
- Motors:
II 2D Ex tb IIIB T125°C Db - Sensors:
II 1D Ex ia IIIB T100°C Da
- Motors:
Conclusion
Understanding ATEX certification codes is essential for anyone involved in specifying, purchasing, installing, or maintaining equipment in hazardous areas. Each element of the marking provides critical safety information that, when properly understood, prevents catastrophic accidents.
Key Takeaways:
- Every character matters – Each letter and number has specific meaning
- Zone determines Category/EPL – Zone 0 requires Category 1/EPL Ga
- Gas Group must match – IIC covers all, IIA covers IIA only
- Temperature Class must be safe – Below auto-ignition temperature
- Protection type must suit application – Different methods for different equipment
- Special conditions must be followed – ‘X’ suffix requires reading full certificate
- Documentation is critical – Keep certificates, maintain traceability
Properly understanding ATEX markings enables you to:
✅ Select safe and compliant equipment
✅ Avoid costly procurement mistakes
✅ Communicate effectively with international suppliers
✅ Ensure regulatory compliance
✅ Prevent explosions and save lives
Remember: The cost difference between correct and incorrect equipment is negligible compared to the cost of an explosion.




