UL Hazardous (Classified) Locations Explained: Class, Division, and Group

Industrial area with hazardous chemical and high voltage warning signs and two workers in safety gear

When electrical equipment is used around flammable gases, vapors, combustible dust, or ignitable fibers, a single spark or hot surface can be enough to trigger a fire or explosion. That is why equipment for these environments is evaluated and marked for use in specific hazardous (classified) locations. In North America, you will most often see these locations described using the Class / Division / Group system (commonly referenced in NEC Article 500 and reflected in UL/CSA product certifications).

The three parts of a hazardous location rating

  • Class tells you what kind of hazard may be present (gas/vapor, dust, or fibers / flyings).
  • Division tells you how likely that hazard is to be present in an ignitable concentration during normal operation.
  • Group further defines the specific material family (for example, acetylene vs. propane), because different substances ignite differently and produce different explosion pressures.

Step 1: Understand the “Class”

  • Class I: Locations where flammable gases or vapors may be present (for example, areas where solvents, fuels, or certain process gases are managed).
  • Class II: Locations where combustible dust may be present (for example, grain handling, powdered chemicals, plastics, wood, or metal dust processes).
  • Class III: Locations where ignitable fibers or flyings may be present (for example, textile-related fibers). These are typically not in suspension in the air at explosive concentrations, but they can still accumulate and ignite.

Step 2: Understand the “Division”

Division 1 indicates the hazard can exist under normal operating conditions. For example, when a process routinely vents, opens, mixes, transfers, or otherwise releases flammable vapors or gases into the air. It can also apply where ignitable concentrations may exist frequently because of routine maintenance or adjustment activities.

Division 2 indicates the flammable gas/vapor (or combustible dust) is handled or stored in closed systems and is not expected to be present in an ignitable concentration during normal operation. The hazard typically shows up only under abnormal conditions—like a seal failure, a broken fitting, an unexpected spill, or loss of ventilation. Division 2 areas are also commonly found adjacent to Division 1 areas (where a release could migrate).

Step 3: Understand the “Group” (Class I: Groups A, B, C, and D)

Within Class I locations, the “Group” letter helps identify the type of gas or vapor involved. Standards use representative gases to define each group (for example, acetylene for Group A and propane for Group D). Grouping matters because different gases ignite differently and can produce different explosion pressures—so the enclosure, wiring methods, and other protection techniques must match the risk.

GroupWhat it generally includesCommon examples you may see referenced
AAtmospheres containing acetylene.Acetylene processes and storage areas.
BAtmospheres containing hydrogen or gases with similar characteristics.Hydrogen handling, some battery rooms, certain chemical processes (site-specific classification applies).
CAtmospheres containing ethylene, ethyl ether, or similar hazards.Chemical production/processing where these vapors may be present.
DAtmospheres containing propane, gasoline vapors, naphtha, alcohols, acetone, benzene, butane, natural gas, and many other common industrial solvents and fuels.Fuel storage/transfer, paint and solvent handling, many general process areas with common hydrocarbons.
  • Why the groups matter: Groups A and B are generally considered more demanding because the representative gases (acetylene and hydrogen) have ignition and pressure characteristics that require more robust protection methods.
  • How to read “Groups A, B, C, D”: If equipment is marked for Groups A, B, C, and D, it means it is acceptable for use with any of those Class I gas/vapor groups (assuming Class and Division also match). If it is marked for only Groups C, D, then it is not intended for acetylene (A) or hydrogen (B) environments.

Tip: You will sometimes hear “Class I, Div. 1” described as the more demanding environment because ignitable concentrations can be present in day-to-day operation. “Class I, Div. 2” often applies where the hazardous material is normally contained (sealed piping, closed vessels) and only becomes a risk if something goes wrong.

What about dust and fiber? (Class II and Class III)

Class II locations involve combustible dust. Dust hazards can be especially tricky because layers of dust can accumulate on equipment and ignite from heat, and suspended dust can explode if it reaches an ignitable concentration.

  • Class II, Group E: Combustible metal dust (often conductive), such as aluminum, magnesium, and similar materials.
  • Class II, Group F: Carbonaceous dust, such as coal, charcoal, and coke dust.
  • Class II, Group G: Other combustible dusts that are not in Group E or F, such as grain, flour, wood, plastic, and many chemical dusts (exact material and particle properties matter).

Class III locations involve easily ignitable fibers or flyings (think lint-like materials). The risk is typically tied to accumulation near equipment rather than a dust cloud explosion, but the ignition and fire spread risk can still be significant.

How to read a typical marking

Hazardous location markings are shorthand. Here are a few examples of how to interpret them:

  • Class I, Div. 1, Group B: Flammable gas/vapor environment where ignitable concentrations may be present in normal operation; gases similar to hydrogen.
  • Class I, Div. 2, Group D: Flammable gas/vapor environment where ignitable concentrations are not normally present; common hydrocarbons/solvents such as propane or gasoline vapors may be present if something abnormal occurs.
  • Class II, Div. 1, Group F: Combustible dust environment (carbonaceous dust) where hazardous dust may be present in normal operation.

Why is hazardous-location equipment different?

Hazardous-location rated products are designed with one goal: do not let the equipment become an ignition source. In everyday industrial settings, ignition can come from arcing contacts (switches/relays), static discharge, hot motor surfaces, or even a loose connection. Depending on the protection method, hazardous-rated equipment may use sealed or heavy-duty enclosures to help contain an internal ignition, limit the chance of sparks reaching the outside atmosphere, and/or control maximum surface temperature.

Choosing the right equipment (and the right rating)

The key takeaway is that a hazardous location rating is not just a label—it is a safety match between your site’s classified area and how the equipment is designed to prevent ignition. Before specifying or installing a product, confirm the area classification for the exact location (including the Class, Division, and Group) and verify the equipment’s certification and markings.

Quick FAQ

  • What does “C1D1” mean? It is shorthand for Class I, Division 1—a gas/vapor hazardous area where ignitable concentrations can exist during normal operation.
  • Is “explosion-proof” the same thing as hazardous-location rated? People often use the terms interchangeably, but markings matter. Always verify the nameplate matches the required Class / Division / Group (and any other required ratings) for the installation area.
  • Who determines the classification? The classification is based on the process, materials, and ventilation at a specific site and is typically documented by qualified personnel and verified by the authority having jurisdiction (AHJ). These can be local fire marshals, building inspectors, zoning boards. At a state level it can be state fire marshals or health departments, at a federal level it can be OSHA.
  • Why does Group matter if I already know it is Class I? Because acetylene, hydrogen, ethylene, and propane-family vapors do not behave the same. The Group helps ensure the equipment is evaluated for the ignition characteristics of the actual gas/vapor present.

Note: This article is intended as a practical overview. Final hazardous area classification and equipment selection should be performed by qualified personnel and verified with the applicable codes/standards and the authority having jurisdiction (AHJ).

Neal Raker, Application Engineering Manager
nealraker@exair.com

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