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What Is Gas Insulated Switchgear (GIS)?

Date: 2026-04-28

Gas Insulated Switchgear (GIS) is a compact, metal-enclosed form of electrical switchgear.

All major conductive parts are sealed inside a pressurized environment filled with insulating gas. It looks very different from traditional Air Insulated Switchgear (AIS) because of how small it is. This technology can reduce the size of a substation by up to 90% compared to conventional AIS.

The main insulating gas has historically been Sulfur Hexafluoride (SF₆). However, the industry is now quickly moving toward more environmentally friendly options. Regardless of the gas used, a Gas Insulated Switchgear handles the basic functions needed in any power system:

  • To control power flow.
  • To protect electrical equipment from faults.
  • To isolate circuits for maintenance.

 

How GIS Works

Here, we will look at the two key roles the insulating gas plays in making Gas Insulated Switchgear so effective: insulation and arc quenching.

 

Superior Dielectric Strength

Dielectric strength is a material’s ability to handle voltage without breaking down.

The insulating gas used in GIS, traditionally SF₆, has strong electronegative properties. This means it easily captures free electrons that could otherwise start an electrical discharge.

This feature, combined with pressurization inside the enclosure, gives the superior dielectric properties of SF₆ gas.

It works far better as an insulator than air does, so conductive parts can safely be placed much closer together.

 

Taming the Electrical Arc

When a circuit breaker must stop a fault current, it creates a powerful electrical arc. The insulating gas plays a key role in putting out this arc. Here is how the process works:

  1. Fault Detection: The system’s protection relays detect an overcurrent or short circuit and signal the breaker to trip.
  2. Contact Separation: As the circuit breaker’s mechanical contacts pull apart, an electrical arc forms between them.
  3. Gas Blast: A mechanism inside the breaker sends a high-pressure blast of insulating gas directly into the arc’s path.
  4. Arc Cooling & Quenching: The gas quickly cools the arc and absorbs its heat energy. Its electronegative nature helps bring the ionized particles back together, putting out the arc and stopping the current.
  5. System Isolation: The circuit is now safely de-energized and open.

 

 

Gas Insulated Switchgear (YRM6-12/24)

  • All-Sealed Design: Stainless steel gas tank filled with SF6 for full environmental isolation.
  • Compact Footprint: Modular design with top extension capability, ideal for space-limited projects.
  • Extreme Reliability: Stable performance in high-altitude, humid, and corrosive environments.
  • Compliance: Engineered to meet international IEC standards for long-term power stability.

Learn More →

YRM6 Gas Insulated Switchgear Solution

 

Inside the GIS Enclosure

A Gas Insulated Switchgear is a highly integrated, modular system. Several key functional units are housed together inside the sealed assembly.

We typically find the following core components within a GIS bay:

  • Circuit Breakers: The active device for interrupting normal and fault currents.
  • Disconnectors (Isolators) & Earth Switches: Used to create a safe isolation gap for maintenance and to securely ground isolated sections.
  • Busbars: The main conductors that move power between different bays of the switchgear.
  • Instrument Transformers (CTs & VTs): Current and Voltage Transformers provide signals for metering, monitoring, and protective relays.
  • Sealed Metal Enclosure: The grounded aluminum or steel housing that contains all live parts and the insulating gas, keeping operators safe and protecting equipment from the environment.
  • Gas Monitoring System: A critical safety device that continuously tracks gas density and pressure, alerting operators to any potential leaks.

 

GIS vs. AIS Comparison

To understand the value of Gas Insulated Switchgear, it helps to compare it directly with Air Insulated Switchgear. GIS offers significant advantages in reliability and maintenance but comes with a higher upfront cost.

 

Feature Gas Insulated Switchgear (GIS) Air Insulated Switchgear (AIS)
Insulation Medium Pressurized SF₆ or alternative gas Atmospheric Air
Footprint Extremely compact (up to 90% smaller) Very large
Reliability Very high (sealed from environment) Moderate (exposed to pollution, weather)
Maintenance Low (long intervals, e.g., 20+ years) High (requires frequent cleaning/inspection)
Safety High (earthed metal enclosure) Moderate (live parts are exposed)
Initial Cost High Low
Installation Site Indoors, outdoors, underground, harsh environments Primarily outdoors in open areas

 

A Greener Future for GIS

The biggest change in modern Gas Insulated Switchgear technology is the shift away from SF₆ gas to address environmental concerns.

 

The SF₆ Environmental Challenge

SF₆ works very well as a technical gas, but it is also the most powerful greenhouse gas known to science. It has a Global Warming Potential (GWP) more than 24,000 times that of CO₂. It can also stay in the atmosphere for over 3,000 years.

Strict environmental rules, like the EU F-Gas Regulation, are speeding up this change as leading manufacturers are developing SF₆-free solutions. These solutions aim to keep the same level of performance while cutting environmental harm.

 

Meet the Eco-Alternatives

A new generation of eco-friendly insulating gases is now being used in the field. These options offer similar performance with a much smaller environmental impact.

The leading choices we see today include:

  • g³ (Green Gas for Grid): A gas mixture based on fluoronitrile that cuts GWP by over 99% compared to SF₆.
  • Dry Air / CO₂ Mixtures: These offer a zero-GWP solution, using purified air, nitrogen, and carbon dioxide as the insulating medium.
  • Fluoroketone-based mixtures: Another type of synthetic gas that also provides a big reduction in GWP.

 

These technologies are no longer just being tested. Utilities are actively using them in new projects, including natural-origin gases for new GIS installations and other SF₆-free options.

 

Essential GIS Applications

The unique benefits of Gas Insulated Switchgear make it the best choice, and sometimes the only choice, for a range of critical applications.

  • Urban Substations: Where land is very expensive or hard to find, the small size of GIS is essential.
  • Offshore Wind Farms & Coastal Areas: The sealed enclosure gives full protection from salty air and moisture, keeping equipment reliable in harsh marine environments.
  • Underground and Indoor Installations: GIS works well for substations in basements, tunnels, or buildings where safety and limited space are top concerns.
  • Industrial Facilities: In places with heavy dust or chemical pollution, the sealed design blocks contamination and keeps operation stable.
  • Hydropower Plants: These are often built inside mountains or caves where space is very limited.

 

Conclusion: Enduring Value of GIS

Gas Insulated Switchgear has proven its worth through its key strengths: small size, high reliability, better safety, and low maintenance needs. While the technology is changing to reduce its environmental impact by moving away from SF₆, its core design remains a foundation of modern power grids.

GIS is essential for building strong, space-efficient electrical infrastructure. It helps bring renewable energy into crowded urban areas and represents the future of switchgear technology, balancing strong performance with growing environmental standards.