Earthing Practice
Earthing Practice
Earthing Practice
Basics of HV Protection
Don't be afraid to give your best to what seemingly are
small jobs. Every time you conquer one it makes you that
much stronger. If you do the little jobs well, the big ones
tend to take care of themselves.
M.Arunachalam,M.E.,
Former Chief
Engineer/TNEB
WHAT IS EARTHING?
Earthing means an Electrical connection
to the general mass of earth to provide safe
passage to fault current to enable to operate
protective devices and provide safety to personnel.
Objectives of Earthing
To ensure that no part of equipments, other
than live parts, assume dangerous potential.
To allow sufficient current to flow safely for
proper operation of protective devices.
To suppress dangerous potential gradients on
the earth surface which may cause incorrect
operation of control & protective devices and
also may cause shock or injury to personnel.
Provide stability of voltage, prevent excessive
voltage peaks during disturbances and
protect against lightning surges.
3
Basic Objectives
Classification of Earthing
Classification of Earthing
1. Neutral grounding
Solidly grounded system
Resistance/Reactance grounding
2. Equipment earthing
3. Reference grounding
4. Discharge grounding
Discharge grounding
For a 22 KV system the BIL is a 150 kv
Suppose a lightning discharge 10 KA
Resistance shall be < 150 / 10 ohms
= 15 ohms
General rule is Tower foot resistance shall
be less than 0.02 *E ,where E is the
system voltage in KV
7
Resistance to Earth
Earth resistance of an electrode is made-up of:
Resistance of the (metal) Electrode
Contact resistance between electrode and the soil,
and
Resistance of the soil from the electrode surface
outward in the geometry setup for the flow of
current from the electrode to the infinite earth.
Soil Resistivity
Soil resistivity is largely depends upon
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
(f)
(g)
Type of Soil
Moisture Content
Chemical Composition of Salt dissolved
in the contained water.
Concentration of Salts
Temperature of Materials
Grain size and distribution of grain size
Closeness of packing
9
500 5,00
800 5,000
4,000 25,000
Range of
Resistivity
40-200 -m
200-2000 -m
Laterite soil
300-2600 -m
20-100 -m
50-300 -m
50-250 -m
50-250 -m
Coastal alluvium
300-1300 -m
Laterite gravelly
200-1000 -m
Nature of soil
12
Current
1 milliamp
5 milliamps
Reaction
Just a faint tingle.
Slight shock felt. Disturbing, but not
painful Most people can let go. however
strong involuntary movements can cause
injuries.
625 milliamps (women) Painful shock. Muscular control is
lost. This is the range where
freezing currents start
930 milliamps (men).
It may not be possible to let go.
50150 milliamps
Extremely painful shock, respiratory
arrest (breathing stops), severe muscle
contractions . Flexor muscles may cause
holding on; extensor muscles may cause
intense pushing away. Death is possible. Contd..
14
Reaction
1,0004,300 milliamps
(14.3 amps)
10,000 milliamps
(10 amps)
15,000 milliamps
(15amps)
15
ac current in
mA
Men
Women
Men
Women
0.6
0.4
0.3
Slight
tingling-perception
threshold
5.2
3.5
1.1
0.7
Shock-not
painful
and
muscular control not lost
1.8
1.2
62
41
76
51
16.0
10.5
90
60
23
15
EFFECT
No sensation on hand
16
Effect of frequency
The tolerable currents mentioned above are for 50 60 Hz.
At high frequencies (3000 10000 Hz) still higher currents
can be tolerated.
17
Protective distances
kV
11
22
33
44
66
88
132
275
400
maxdistance
ontrsftank
ontrsftank
3m
5m
6m
6m
7m
18m
24m
18
19
20
21
Remember:
Copper wire 1 m long, 1 mm thick:
17.5 m
(10-3)
17.5 M
(106)
TT (terre terre):
24
IT (isol terre):
Advantage: No failure after first earth fault.
But is IT good for IT?
25
26
WRONG!
RIGHT!
27
28
SELECTIVITY:
Ability to isolate only the defective
plant from the rest of the system. The
methods of isolations are:
Time grading, i.e. the protection device
nearest the fault trips the fastest and
all the others between it and the power
source successively slower
HOW ?
32
33
Reliability :
Ability of the protection device to
fulfill its purpose throughout its operational life.
The distinction made on Reliability are :
- dependability, the assurance that the
protection device will perform its designated
function and selectively trip the protected
item
of primary plant in the event of a fault.
- security, the assurance that the protection
device will not trip unless there is a fault on
the protected item of primary plant.
-availability, the ratio of the time that a
protection device is actually serviceable to 35
the total time it is in operation.
PLC
CT = current transformer
PT = Voltage transformer
PD
Battery
TC
CB
CT
PD = protection device
B = battery
FU
PT
37
Operating speed:
The time between the incidence of a fault
and the trip command being issued to the
circuit- breaker by the protection is
determined by the power system
configuration and in the case of modern
protection devices is typically one period of
the power system frequency or fractions of
a period. The total fault clearance time is
the sum of protection tripping time and the
rupture time of the Circuit-breaker.
38
Operating speed:
The time between the incidence of a fault
and the trip command being issued to the
circuit- breaker by the protection is
determined by the power system
configuration and in the case of modern
protection devices is typically one period of
the power system frequency or fractions of
a period. The total fault clearance time is
the sum of protection tripping time and the
rupture time of the Circuit-breaker.
39
Basic structure of a
Protection system
PROTECTED UNIT
IT
IT = Instrument Transformer
PD
CC
AS
D&R
PD = Protection Device
CC = Control Circuit
AS = Auxiliary supply
2NOs16MVA
110/33KV%Z 10%
33KV Bus
GC Bkr.
CTR 400/1A
1.3secDMT
PMS 0.75 TLS 0.35
2NOs16MVA
110/11KV %Z10%
11KV Bus
41
1371 MVA
total Imp,
84.45
46.64
37.82 Ohms
4122amps
11kV Bus
13360amps
42
ARRANGEMENTS OF
A FEEDER PROTECTION
Current
Transformers
Isolator
Circuit
Breaker
TO
LOAD
BUS
43
SUBSTATION TRANSFORMER
DIFFERENTIAL PROTECTION
Zone of protection
CT2
I2
CT1
I1
I1
Iop
I2
Ires=I1 + I2
Iop=I1- I2
Comparator
The difference between the current entering and leaving the power plant equipment, a
transformer, is compared, to restraint for faults outside the zone and trips for faults inside
the zone
44
+ve
- ve
Fuse
Trip contacts
External resistor
52a
S /T coil
link
52a
R1
C.B.
R7
45
46
CONVENTIONAL ELECTROMECHANICAL
OVER CURRENT RELAY
Simple cost effective
inverse time over
current and earth
fault relays
High accuracy
Proven long life
reliability
Modern materials
Zero battery drain
50
Protection
Metering
Control
Condition
Monitoring
51
THANKING YOU
ALL
52