mia077 said:
I'm trying to determine exactly what electric isolation is and how to break isolation. Is Galvanic isolation the same as electric isolation? I have found some information on Galvanic but not Electrical. If anyone has a good resource to recommend on the subject I would appreciate it. Thanks
Well, it depends on what you mean by electric isolation. The first meaning (a synonym of insulation) is just keeping your electrical thingamajig (be it a piece of electronics, a wire, or high-voltage transmission cable) from forming an electrical connection with the things / people around it. This is usually accomplished by, say, wrapping a very poor conductor (e.g. certain plastics) around your wire / cable / device, or by suspending it away from any conducting surfaces using, say, a ceramic or glass insulator.
But the other meaning, the one I suspect may be more pertinent, is to transmit a digital or analog signal from point A to point B without actually making an electrical connection and having electrons flow from point A to B. An example of this would be wireless RF transmission (though this is usually the most expensive method of isolation and thus the one that's least used).
Normally, you desire isolation (and try your best not to break it) because you can protect one side from being damaged along with the other (e.g. when you have a current surge, or an electrostatic discharge), or have different ground levels, or have especially noisy power or ground lines, and want to keep this noise isolated away from another part of the circuit.
With all the above, my usual working definition of galvanic isolation is just electric isolation:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galvanic_isolation
To accomplish this, you'd usually use optoisolators (convert the electrical signal to light via an LED, and then convert the light back to an electrical signal via a phototransistor), or a digital isolator (converts via magnetic flux--you can think of it as sort of a very small isolation transformer).
I hope the above has been useful, or, at the very least, understandable (I tend to lose some of my understandability after a day or two without sleep).
EDIT: And reading comprehension.