What is a Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter?
A ground-fault circuit interrupterĀ (GFCI) is there to protect people fromĀ electrical shock, so it is completely different from aĀ fuse.
This is different from a circuit breaker or fuse. The idea behind a fuse is to protect a house from an electrical fire. If the hot wire were to accidentally touch the neutral wire for some reason (say, because a mouse chews through the insulation, or someone drives aĀ nail through the wire while hanging a picture, or theĀ vacuum cleanerĀ sucks up an outlet cord and cuts it), an incredible amount of current will flow through the circuit and start heating it up like one of the coils in aĀ toaster. The fuse heats up faster than the wire and burns out before the wire can start a fire.
AĀ GFCIĀ is much more subtle. When you look at a normal 120-volt outlet in the United States, there are two vertical slots and then a round hole centered below them. The left slot is slightly larger than the right. The left slot is called āneutral,ā the right slot is called āhotā and the hole below them is called āground.ā If an appliance is working properly, all electricity that the appliance uses will flow from hot to neutral. A GFCIĀ monitors the amount of current flowing from hot to neutral. If there is anyĀ imbalance, itĀ trips the circuit. It is able to sense a mismatch as small as 4 or 5 milliamps, and it can react as quickly as one-thirtieth of a second.
So letās say you are outside with your power drill and it is raining. You are standing on the ground, and since the drill is wet there is a path from the hot wire inside the drill through you to ground (seeĀ How Power Distribution Grids WorkĀ for details on grounding). If electricity flows from hot to ground through you, it could be fatal. The GFCI can sense the current flowing through you because not all of the current is flowing from hot to neutral as it expects ā some of it is flowing through you to ground. As soon as the GFCI senses that, it trips the circuit and cuts off the electricity.