Fire alarm control panel
A fire alarm control panel, fire alarm control unit, fire indicator panel, or simply fire alarm panel is the controlling component of a fire alarm system. The panel receives information from devices designed to detect and report fires, monitors their operational integrity, and provides for automatic control of equipment, and transmission of information necessary to prepare the facility for fire based on a predetermined sequence. The panel may also supply electrical energy to operate any associated initiating device, notification appliance, control, transmitter, or relay. There are four basic types of panels: coded panels, conventional panels, addressable panels, and multiplex systems.
Coded panels
Coded panels were the earliest type of central fire alarm control, and were made during the 1800s to the 1970s. A coded panel is similar in many ways to a modern conventional panel, except each zone was connected to its own code wheel, which, depending on the way the panel was set up, would either do sets of four rounds of code until the initiating pull station was reset, or run continuously until the panel itself was reset.Large panels could take up an entire wall in a mechanical room, with dozens of code wheels. Lists of codes had to be maintained, sometimes with copies posted above pull stations. Smaller panels could be set up in one of two ways. Most of the time, the panel would only have one zone, and therefore, only one code.
Alternatively, the panel could be made with no code wheels, using only what was called the gong relay. Normally, this would be used in a system with coded pull stations to re-transmit the coding strikes from the pulls. However, it could also be used as its own zone, with the connected horns or bells sounding continuously instead of in a particular code. These panels are not common today, but can sometimes be found in older buildings such as those on college campuses or hospitals.
Classic electromechanical coded panels using relays and coded interruptor wheels are functionally obsolete, and have been largely replaced.
Conventional panels
"Conventional" panels have been around ever since electronic components became small enough to make them viable replacements for the historic electromechanical control panels. Conventional panels are used less frequently in large buildings than in the past, but are still seen on smaller projects such as small schools, stores, restaurants, and apartment buildings.A conventional fire alarm control panel employs one or more electrical signalling circuits, connected to initiating devices wired in parallel. These sensors are designed to dramatically decrease the circuit resistance when the environmental conditions on any sensor exceed a predetermined trigger threshold. In a conventional fire alarm system, the information density or resolution is limited to the number of such individual wired circuits installed.
To facilitate location and control of fire within a building, the structure usually is subdivided into distinct identified areas or zones. Floors of a multi-storey building are one type of zone boundary. A very simple system may have a small number of zones.
An Initiating Device Circuit connected to multiple devices within the same "zone" of protection, effectively provides 3 distinct states of information about the zone to the panel: Normal, Trouble, or Alarm. The state of each initiating device circuit within a zone displays at the fire alarm control panel using visible indications, such as a flashing LED/light or an LCD display.
The panel may employ a graphical representation of the zone boundaries on a floor plan using textual descriptions, illuminated icons, illuminated sections, or illuminated points on the map corresponding to initiating circuits connected to the fire alarm control panel. Annunciators that display this way are called graphic annunciators.
An important output of any alarm control panel is the Notification Appliance Circuit. This signal triggers alarm horns, strobe lights, and whatever other notification appliances are used to alert building occupants of an alarm condition.
Larger systems and increasing demand for finer diagnostic detail beyond broad area location and control functions expanded the control by zone strategy of conventional systems by providing multiple initiating circuits within a common zone, each exclusively connected to a particular type of initiating device, or group of devices. This arrangement forms a device-type-by-zone matrix whose information is particularly suited to a tabular annunciator. In multistorey buildings employing a tabular annunciator, for example: rows of indicators define the floors horizontally in their stacked relationship and the type of device installed on that floor displays as columns of indicators vertically aligned through each floor. The intersection of the floor and device indicators provides the combined information. The density of information however remains a function of the number of circuits employed.
Even larger systems and demands for finer diagnostic and location detail led to the introduction of addressable fire alarm systems, with each addressable device providing specific information about its state while sharing a common communication circuit. Annunciation and location strategies for the most part remain relatively unchanged.
Multiplex system panels
Multiplex systems, a sort of transition between conventional and modern addressable systems, were often used in large buildings and complexes from the mid to late 1970s into the late 1980s. Early on, these systems were programmed to function as large conventional systems. Gradually, later installations began to feature components and features of modern addressable systems. These systems were often capable of controlling more than a building's fire alarm system without any type of alarm or trouble condition present. While the main panel was the brains of the system and could be used to access certain functions, fire alarm controls were usually accessed through transponders. These were smaller conventional panels programmed to "communicate" the status of part of the system to the main panel, and which also could be used to access basic fire alarm control functions.Addressable panels
Addressable panels are usually more advanced than their conventional counterparts, with much greater information capacity and control flexibility. Addressable fire alarm panels were introduced by many manufacturers during the microcontroller boom in the mid 1980s.Signalling Line Circuits (SLC)
Addressable Fire Alarm Control Panel employ one or more Signalling Line Circuits - usually referred to as loops or SLC loops - ranging between one and thirty. Depending on the protocol used, a Signaling Line Circuit can monitor and control up to several hundred devices. Some protocols permit any mix of detectors and input/output modules, while other protocols have 50% of channel capacity restricted to detectors/sensors and 50% restricted to input/output modules. Each SLC polls the devices connected, which can number from a few devices to several hundred, depending on the manufacturer. Large systems may have multiple Signalling Line Circuits.Each device on an SLC has its own unique address, and thus the panel knows the state of each individual device connected to it. Common addressable input devices include
- Smoke detectors
- Heat detectors
- Manual call points or manual pull stations
- Notification appliances
- Responders
- Fire sprinkler system inputs
- Switch status
- * Flow control
- * Pressure
- * Isolate
- * Standard switches
- * Monitor modules
- relays
- Door holder relays
- Auxiliary relays
- Control modules
- Relay modules
- Switching fans on or off
- Closing/opening doors
- Activating fire suppression systems
- Activating notification appliances
- Shutting down industrial equipment
- Recalling elevators to a safe exit floor
- Activating another fire alarm panel or communicator
- Causing emergency exit signs to flash
Mapping
Also known as "cause and effect", mapping is the process of activating outputs depending on which inputs have been activated. Traditionally, when an input device is activated, a certain output device is activated. As time has progressed, more and more advanced techniques have become available, often with large variations in style between different companies.Zones
Zones are usually made by dividing a building or area into different sections. Then depending on the specific zone, a certain number and type of device is added to the zone to perform its given job. Zones are a requirement of the National Building Code in Canada, and zones must be labelled and include red LEDs for fire zones, with amber LEDs for supervisory and trouble. The LED indicators are in addition to an LCD display, although this requirement is waived if the LCD has 8 or more lines of characters. Isolators are also required when wiring departs a zone and enters a new zone such as floor to floor and between firewalls.Groups
Groups contain multiple output devices such as relays. This allows a single input, such as a smoke detector or alarm pull station to have only one output programmed to a group, which then maps to multiple outputs or relays. This enables an installer to simplify programming by having many inputs map to the same outputs, and be able to change them all at once, and also allows mapping to more outputs than the programming space for a single detector/input allows.Boolean logic
This is the part of a fire panel that may have the largest variation between different panels. This capability allows a panel to be programmed to detect fairly complex inputs. For instance, a panel could be programmed to notify the fire department only if more than one device has activated. It can also be used for staged evacuation procedures in conjunction with timers.Networking of panels
The principle of networking involves connecting several panels together to form an integrated system. Inputs on one panel may activate outputs on another for example, or the network may allow monitoring of many systems. Networking is often used in situations where one panel is not large enough, or in multiple-building situations. Networking is also an effective way to decouple systems to reduce the risk of a large portion of a facility going offline at any time due to system failure or maintenance requirements. Sub-networks can be created using either hardware or software architectures. Networked systems normally are more costly and involve additional training and system configuration for successful implementation.Although quasi-standards exist allowing panels from different manufacturers to be networked with each other, they are not always supported by all companies. One of the most common protocols used is BACnet, which is already common for various type of industrial networks. Typical interconnected systems to the Fire Alarm Control Panel include HVAC, Building Automation Controllers, Security/Access Control, or Elevator Controllers. The Arcnet protocol has been used for years in industrial applications, and is also used for networking Fire Alarm Control Panels.
More recently, some panels are being networked with standard Ethernet, but this is not yet very common. Many organizations choose to create their own proprietary protocol, which has the added benefit of allowing them to do anything they like, allowing the technology to progress further. However, a bridging layer between the proprietary network and BACnet is usually available.
Networking may be used to allow a number of different panels to be monitored by one centralized graphical monitoring system.
Releasing panels
Releasing panels are capable of using solenoids to disperse fire-fighting chemical agents such as Halon or water from piping located throughout a building. A releasing panel usually will have a manual abort switch to abort an accidental release which could damage property or equipment. Releasing capability can be part of both addressable or conventional panels.Other auxiliary panels
Other types of fire alarm control panels include voice evacuation panels, which are panels designed to provide outputs for speakers in the system when the main panel does not already have built-in voice evacuation ability. Another type are Notification Appliance Circuit extenders usually meant for powering more notification appliances than the main panel could normally power, though sometimes NAC extenders are also used for synchronization of the alarms.Alarm monitoring
In nearly every state in the US, the International Building Code requires fire alarm and sprinkler systems to be monitored by an approved supervising station.A fire alarm system consists of a computer-based control connected to a central station. The majority of fire alarm systems installed in the US are monitored by a UL listed or FM Global approved supervising station.
These systems will generally have a top level map of the entire site, with various building levels displayed. The user can progress through the different stages. From top level site → building plan → floor plan → zone plan, or however else the building's security system is organized.
Many of these systems have touch screens, but most users tend to prefer a mouse, as it is quite easy for a touch screen to become misaligned and for mistakes to be made. With the advent of the optical mouse, this is now a very viable option.