Top Ten Misunderstandings Regarding Over-Voltage Protection Mike Tachick Dairyland Electrical Industries Inc. SIEO, Jan 2016.

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Presentation transcript:

Top Ten Misunderstandings Regarding Over-Voltage Protection Mike Tachick Dairyland Electrical Industries Inc. SIEO, Jan 2016

Why this topic? Over-voltage can be a confusing subject I see repeated mistakes, errors by industry personnel Consequences of these misunderstandings can be lethal

Ground mats aren’t great AC mitigation grounds… Gradient control mats are intended to limit step and touch voltage Address AC fault and lightning conditions, depending on design Installed around test stations and piping Installed in/under high resistivity fill

Ground mats aren’t great AC mitigation grounds…

Ground mat hopefully limits earth gradient and touch voltage High resistivity fill further limits effects upon person over the mat (limits current) High resistivity  High resistance to earth High resistance  Little AC mitigation

Ground mats aren’t great AC mitigation grounds… Gradient control mats serve useful purpose for step/touch protection Are part of AC mitigation design for test stations and facilities But other mitigation components perform voltage reduction from between pipe and earth

Conductor length matters Any conduction path has inductance Inductance resists current changes and creates large voltage differences when current abruptly changes Resulting voltage between connection points can be large

Conductor length matters Matters most where insulation (or people) can’t withstand resulting voltage Examples: insulated joint, coating, insulated fittings Result without remediation: arcing

Conductor length matters

Resulting V AB relates to inductance L and rate of change of current, di/dt V = L  di/dt Consider lightning, with high di/dt V = 0.2μH/ft  15,000A/μs V = 3,000V/ft = higher than you expected

Some ground mat designs may provide little protection Ground mats are wire designs in various orientations: – Spiral – Zig-zag – Grid

Some ground mat designs may provide little protection Grid type matSpiral or single wire mat

Some ground mat designs may provide little protection Remember the discussion about conductor length…? Increased conductor length = increased inductance = higher voltage Mats vary in inductance with design Voltage gradient under AC fault conditions with any mat design: likely OK Voltage gradient with lightning: big difference

Some ground mat designs may provide little protection VV Single wireGrid

Some ground mat designs may provide little protection Radial Distance (In.) Touch Potential (kV) Step Potential (kV/ft) Radial Distance (In.) Touch Potential (V) Step Potential (V/ft) Single wire/spiral matGrid mat Note values in kVNote values in V Ref 1

Conductor length isn’t key in all applications Where insulation can break down, or personnel can contact different structures, consider conductor length: – Insulated joints – Insulated fittings – Bonding grounding systems, mats, fences

Conductor length isn’t key in all applications Applications where you can’t control conductor length: – AC mitigation systems (generally) – Decouplers in electrical grounding systems Conductor length can’t reasonably be shortened Other factors are more important in these examples: dealing with AC induction and faults

Total isolation of structures is risky Some attempt to provide isolation between structures to prevent “bad things” from happening The idea: Keep the bad stuff on one side, don’t allow it to reach the other side Reality: not possible, introduces new major risks (arcing, ignition, shock hazard)

Total isolation of structures is risky Protection methods are needed between any two isolation structures where high voltage may occur Over-voltage protection is simple to apply Limits voltage, allows current to flow

Total isolation of structures is risky Current flow on structures is not a problem Important factor: how does current enter/exit the structure? Apply mitigation or over-voltage protection at other points that act as “exit” point

Decouplers are not one-way devices Decouplers are over-voltage and AC mitigation devices Devices have a threshold in each polarity and block DC inside that range, and conduct outside the range Decouplers conduct AC continuously

Decouplers are not one-way devices Decoupler Threshold of -3V/+1V Shown

Decouplers are not one-way devices If decouplers were one-way devices, then they must withstand full reverse voltage and not conduct If true, then voltage in reverse direction could not be limited or controlled Result: over-voltage conditions, device would fail at some point

AC induction always has fault risk “I just want to mitigate the steady-state AC, but we don’t have fault exposure” AC is induced on pipelines from overhead power lines Magnetic field surrounds current flow on line, induces current/voltage on pipe Many variables determine resulting voltage level, but any steady-state AC comes from induction phenomenon

AC induction always has fault risk Steady-state Fault

AC induction always has fault risk AC fault is just a higher amplitude version of steady-state induction Same phenomena governs both – it’s all magnetic induction Conclusion: any measured steady-state AC will increase under fault conditions

Lightning ≠ AC or DC Characteristics of lightning are not similar to AC or DC, and produce different effects Lightning waveform is unique Conductor length discussion applies to lightning, unlike AC or DC

Lightning ≠ AC or DC Current Magnitude Time in microseconds Slope = di/dt Fast rise time High magnitude

Lightning ≠ AC or DC Keep conduction paths short Reference nearby structures to each other Don’t leave structures ungrounded Conductors don’t need to be large to handle lightning current - est. #6AWG

Monolithic joints need protection Monolithic joints are factory assembled and tested Have higher voltage withstand than bolted flanged joints …but not unlimited

Monolithic joints need protection Over-voltage protection needed Without it, designer may be trying to totally isolate two structures under all conditions Without protection, end result is same, but arc is initiated at perhaps 25kV instead of 5kV

Leave equipment grounds as designed Equipment grounds can affect CP AC powered equipment has a dedicated grounding conductor Grounding conductor carries AC fault current if equipment fails, cable short, etc Breaker in panel senses current and clears fault Without this ground, fault clearing will be affected

Leave equipment grounds as designed

Solve CP problems with the grounding conductor intact Use certified decoupler to provide DC isolation and AC continuity of the ground, or other techniques

Questions? For further questions, contact: – Mike Tachick – – Phone Ref 1: NACE 2005 Henry Tachick Paper #05617