Earthing Systems: Direct and Indirect Contacts
Earthing Systems: Direct and Indirect Contacts
Earthing Systems: Direct and Indirect Contacts
The purpose of these three systems is identical as regards protection of persons and
property. They are considered to be equivalent with respect to safety of persons
against indirect contacts. However, the same is not necessarily true for
dependability of the LV electrical installation with respect to:
electrical power availability;
Installation maintenance.
Direct and indirect contacts
Before beginning to study the earthing systems, a review of Electric Shock by
direct and indirect contacts will certainly be useful.
1
Treatment of protection against direct contacts is completely independent from the
earthing system, but this measure is necessary in all circuit supply cases where
implementation of the earthing system downstream is not mastered. Consequently,
some countries make this measure a requirement:
o for sockets of rating i 32 A,
o in some types of installations (temporary, worksite, etc.).
2
Earthing systems and protection of persons
The LV earthing system characterizes the earthing mode of the secondary of the
MV/LV transformer and the means of earthing the installation frames. Each
earthing system can be applied to an entire LV electrical installation; however
several earthing systems may be included in the same installation.
Identification of the system types is thus defined by means of 2 letters:
the first one for transformer neutral connection:
o T for "connected" to the earth,
o I for "isolated" from the earth;
the second one for the type of application frame connection:
o T for "directly connected" to the earth,
o N for "connected to the neutral" at the origin of the installation, which
is connected to the earth (see figure 2.5).
3
1. TN system
When an insulating fault is present, the fault current Id is only limited by the
impedance of the fault loop cables:
Id = Vo / (Rph1+Rd+ RPE)
4
To guarantee this condition, another approach consists in imposing a maximum
impedance value on the fault loops according to the type and rating of the SCPDs
chosen. This approach may result in increasing the cross-section of the live and/or
protective conductors.
Another means of checking that the device will ensure protection of persons is to
calculate the maximum length not to be exceeded by each feeder for a given
protection threshold Ia.
For the protection device to perform its function properly, Ia must be less than Id,
hence the expression of Lmax, the maximum length authorised by the protection
device with a threshold Ia:
If the line is longer than Lmax, either conductor cross-section must be increased or
it must be protect protected using a Residual Current Device (RCD).
5
2. TT system
When an insulation fault occurs, the fault current Id (see figure 2.10) is mainly
limited by the earth resistances (if the earth connection of the frames and the earth
connection of the neutral are not associated). Still assuming that Rd = 0, the fault
current is:
Id = 0.8Uo / (Ra + Rb)
This fault current induces a fault voltage in the earth resistance of the applications:
As earth resistances are normally low and of the same magnitude (=10 Ω), this
voltage of the order of Uo/2 is dangerous. The part of installation affected by the
fault must therefore be automatically disconnected.
As the fault current beyond which a risk is present is far lower than
the settings of the overcurrent protection devices, at least one RCD must be fitted
at the supply end of the installation. In order to increase availability of electrical
power, use of several RCDs ensures time and current discrimination on tripping.
6
All these RCDs will have a nominal current threshold IΔn less than Id0. The
standard stipulates that de-energising by the RCDs must occur in less than 1 s.
Note that protection by RCD:
does not depend on cable length;
authorises several separate Ra earth connections (an unsuitable measure
since the PE is no longer a unique potential reference for the entire
installation).
3. IT system
The neutral is unearthed, i.e. not connected to the earth. The earth connections of
the frames are normally interconnected (just like the TN and TT earthing systems).
In normal operation (without insulation fault), the network is earthed by the
network leakage impedance. In order to properly set the potential of a network in
IT with respect to the earth, we advise that you place an impedance (Zn=1,500Ω)
between transformer neutral and the earth.... this is the IT impedance-earthed
system.
Behavior on the first fault
o Unearthed neutral:
The fault current is formed as follows (maximum value in the case of a full fault
and neutral not distributed).
If = Ic1 + Ic2, where:
Ic1 = j Cf ω V13, Ic2 = j Cf ω V23, Id = Uo3 Cf ω.
For 1 km of 230/400V network, the fault voltage will be equal to:
Uc = Rb Id, i.e. 0.7 V if Rb = 10 Ω.
This voltage is not dangerous and the installation can thus be kept in operation.
If the neutral is distributed, the shift of neutral potential with respect to the earth
adds a current Icn = Uo Cf ω and Id = Uo4 Cf ω.
7
First insulation fault current in IT system.
The corresponding fault voltage is still low and not dangerous; the installation can
be kept in operation. Although risk-free continuity of service is a great advantage,
it is necessary:
- to know that there is a fault,
- to track it and eliminate it promptly, before a second fault occurs.
To meet this need:
- the fault information is provided by an Insulation Monitoring Device
(IMD) monitoring all live conductors, including the neutral,
- locating is performed by means of fault trackers.
8
Behavior on the second fault
When a second fault occurs and the first fault has not yet been eliminated, there are
three possibilities:
o the fault concerns the same live conductor: nothing happens and
operation can continue,
o the fault concerns two different live conductors: if all the frames are
inter-connected, the double fault is a short-circuit (via the PE). The
Electric Shock hazard is similar to that encountered with the TN system.
The most unfavorable conditions for the SCPDs (smallest Id) are
obtained when both faults occur on feeders with the same characteristics
(cross-sections and lengths).
9
Note that if one of the two faults is on the neutral, the fault current and fault
voltage are twice as low as in the TN system. This has resulted in standard makers
authorizing longer SCPD operating times. Just as in the TN earthing system,
protection by SCPD only applies to maximum cable lengths:
- Distributed neutral:
- Non-distributed neutral:
This is provided that the neutral is protected and its cross-section equal to phase
cross section...This is the main reason why certain country standards advise against
distributing the neutral.
- Case where all frames are not interconnected.
For frames earthed individually or in groups, each circuit or group of circuits must
be protected by a RCD. In point of fact, should an insulation fault occur in groups
connected to two different earth connections, the earthing system's reaction to the
insulation fault (Id, Ud) is similar to that of a TT system (the fault current flows
through the earth). Protection of persons against indirect contacts is thus ensured in
the same manner Note that in view of the times specified by the standard,
horizontal time discrimination can be achieved to give priority to continuity of
service on certain feeders.
In order to protect LV unearthed networks (IT) against voltage rises (arcing in the
MV/LV transformer, accidental contact with a network of higher voltage, lightning
on the MV network), standard stipulates that a surge limiter must be installed
between the neutral point of the MV/LV transformer and the earth (Rb).
10