Faults and Failures. Faults can damage equipment and facilities, drive up costs due to lost production time, and lead to employee injuries, and even fatalities. The four types of faults include:
- Line-to-ground faults, which represent about 98% of all failures.
- Phase-to-phase faults, which account for about 1.5% of all failures.
- 3-phase faults, which make up less than 0.5% of all faults and are often caused by human error. Failure to remove a grounding breaker, leaving ground clusters on systems, and lifting a truck bed into an open wire system can cause this type of fault.
- Arcing faults are intermittent failures between phases or phase-to-ground. They’re discontinuous currents that alternately strike, extinguish, and strike again.
Grounding systems.
1. Ungrounded. Electrical power systems that are operated with no intentional connection to earth ground are described as ungrounded. Although these systems were standard in the ’40s and ’50s, they’re still in use today. The main advantage of this type of grounding system is that it offers a low value of current flow and reliability during a fault. Unfortunately, this type of system also offers some big disadvantages. One major disadvantage to an ungrounded system is in the difficulty in locating a line-to-ground fault. Finding the fault is a time consuming process. For that reason, it’s often done on the weekends so a company doesn’t have to shut down its normal production processes. In addition, the fault must be located and repaired quickly because if a second fault occurs, the fault acts like a phase-to-phase fault extending the repair process.
Advantages
- Offers a low value of current flow for line-to-line ground fault (5A or less).
- Presents no flash hazard to personnel for accidental line-to-ground fault.
- Assures continued operation of processes on the first occurrence of a line-to-ground fault.
- Low probability of line-to-ground arcing fault escalating to phase-to-phase or 3-phase fault.
- Difficult to locate line-to-ground fault.
- Doesn’t control transient overvoltages.
- Cost of system maintenance is higher due to labor involved in locating ground faults.
- A second ground fault on another phase will result in a phase-to-phase short circuit.
A solidly grounded system has high values of current ranging between 10kA and 20kA. This current flows through grounding wires, building steel, conduit, and water pipes, which can cause major damage to equipment and shut down production processes. When a line-to-ground fault occurs, arcing can create flashes–generally in the terminating box. In this enclosed area, water is turned to steam, causing the terminating box. To locate the fault, all you need to do is follow the smoke.
Advantages
- Good control of transient overvoltage from neutral to ground.
- Allows user to easily locate faults.
- Can supply line-neutral loads.
- Poses severe arc flash hazards.
- Requires the purchase and installation of an expensive main breaker.
- Unplanned interruption of production process.
- Potential for severe equipment damage during a fault.
- High values of fault current.
- Likely escalation of single-phase fault to 3-phase fault.
- Creates problems on the primary system.
Advantages
- Limits the ground fault current to a low level.
- Reduces electric shock hazards.
- Controls transient overvoltages.
- Reduces the mechanical stresses in circuits and equipment.
- Maintains continuity of service.
- Reduces the line voltage drop caused by the occurrence and clearing of a ground fault.
- High frequencies can appear as nuisance alarms.
- Ground fault may be left on system for an extended period of time.
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