in a water purification plant, driven by a
marine propulsion diesel engine stored in a
base station as an emergency power, system high-availability
emergency power systems like hospitals and
stand-alone power systems Mains power can be lost due to downed lines, malfunctions at a sub-station, inclement weather, planned
blackouts or in extreme cases a
grid-wide failure. In modern buildings, most emergency power systems have been and are still based on
generators. Usually, these generators are diesel engine driven, although smaller buildings may use a
gasoline-engine-driven generator. Some larger building have
gas turbines, but they can take 5 or up to 30 minutes to produce power. Lately, more use is being made of
deep cycle batteries and other technologies such as
flywheel energy storage or
fuel cells. These latter systems do not produce polluting gases, thereby allowing the placement to be done within the building. Also, as a second advantage, they do not require a separate shed to be built for fuel storage. With regular generators, an
automatic transfer switch is used to connect emergency power. One side is connected to both the normal power feed and the emergency power feed; and the other side is connected to the load designated as emergency. If no electricity comes in on the normal side, the transfer switch uses a solenoid to throw a triple pole, double throw switch. This switches the feed from normal to emergency power. The loss of normal power also triggers a battery operated
starter system to start the generator, similar to using a car battery to start an engine. Once the transfer switch is switched and the generator starts, the building's emergency power comes back on (after going off when normal power was lost). Unlike
emergency lights, emergency lighting is not a type of light fixture; it is a pattern of the building's normal lights that provides a path of lights to allow for safe exit, or lights up service areas such as mechanical rooms and electric rooms.
Exit signs,
fire alarm systems (that are not on back up batteries) and the electric motor pumps for the
fire sprinklers are almost always on emergency power. Other equipment on emergency power may include smoke isolation dampers, smoke evacuation fans, elevators, handicap doors and outlets in service areas. Hospitals use emergency power outlets to power
life support systems and monitoring equipment. Some buildings may even use emergency power as part of normal operations, such as a theater using it to power show equipment in accordance with the principle of "
the show must go on". ==Operation in aviation==