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Upgrade Grounding System For Today’s Technology
BY DEL WILLIAMS |
Aging or unchecked grounding raises the risk of data/equipment loss,
process anomalies, plant shutdown and more.
Unless your plant still uses the identical technology it did 30, 20,
even 10 years ago (when Google didn’t yet exist), then trusting your
plant’s operation to a grounding system installed decades ago
— or testing it with a technology developed 80 years ago — isn’t
perhaps the wisest choice.
What you don’t know about your industrial plant’s grounding could
not only hurt you, resulting in loss of life, but can cost you lost
data and equipment as well as slowing processes or halted
production.
No industrial facility manager would consider violating fire code
for fear of the consequences. Yet in too many plants, the foundation
for all things electric — the grounding system — is allowed to go
out
of spec due to aging, corrosion, facility and soil changes, as well
as infrequent/inadequate
grounding test evaluation. But out of sight does not mean out of
danger when it comes to grounding.
“Failing to properly evaluate and fix grounding problems cannot only
result in unnecessary lightning and transient damage, but also
data/equipment loss, process anomalies, plant shutdown, as well as
increased fire and personnel risk,” said Joe Lanzoni, a manager with
Boulder, CObased
Lightning Eliminators & Consultants, Inc. (LEC), a firm specializing
in electrical grounding, surge suppression, and lightning
protection. “Particularly susceptible to these disruptions are
plants
with sensitive computer, communication, and process control
equipment, requiring low grounding impedance from one to 10 ohms to
work properly.”
Proper grounding is the first line of defense against the $1 billion
spent annually on damage around the globe due to lightning and 60
percent of system outages due to lightning on the East Coast alone.
Power surge protection equipment also depends on good grounding to
defend against power surges and spikes, as well as diverting
lightning discharges of up to 400,000 amps to ground.
Many U.S. industrial grounding systems are in poor repair and the
limitations of traditional grounding system testing are hindering
efforts to resolve the problem. Fortunately, there are technologies
being
designed to keep up with technical advances in the manufacturing and
process control industries. Improved ground system testing methods,
such as Smart Ground Testing, are now offered by consulting firms
such as LEC, which has over 30 years of engineering experience
originating
in NASA and the U.S. space programs.
Any facility experiencing equipment, process, or production
anomalies could benefit from a grounding evaluation to determine if
it is a possible source of the problem. In fact, any facility
without a recent
grounding evaluation could benefit, especially those involved in
manufacturing, process control, or with sensitive electronic
equipment or data centers.
Industrial Grounding
Systems Deteriorating
In many cases, the grounding rods in U.S. industrial plants have
exceeded their usable lifespan of 30 years because they haven’t been
properly tested or maintained since installation decades earlier
(some pre-date WWII). Out of sight unless dug up, the grounding rods
and connectors of
these buried grounding grids typically suffer corrosion and
undetected electrical discontinuities
— causing dangerous faults, processing errors or shutdowns. The
problem is especially pronounced in the low resistivity soils near
coasts and waterways, which accelerate corrosion.
“Existing grounding capacity is often compromised when contractors
dig up or sever grounding wires when burying pipe or telecom
cables,” adds Lanzoni. “Plant changes and expansions just aggravate
the problem when grounding isn’t tested and upgraded to meet
facility or equipment demands.”
These grounding problems often continue for years, causing
electrical problems, equipment failure, and even risking personnel
electrocution from ground faults that are not safely conducted into
the earth through the grounding system.
Until recently, even when facility managers tried to resolve
grounding problems, the drawbacks of traditional ground system
testing have stood in the way. The Limitations of Traditional Ground
System Testing Clamp-on ground resistance testers, although
convenient, should be limited to testing power distribution poles
and residential grounds.
Their primary weakness is that their accuracy suffers — to the point
of displaying nothing or a meaningless number — if resistance is low
or a ground loop is present.
The grounding electrode being tested must also be parallel with a
large number of other electrodes, which is not always practical.
Three-point Fall-of-Potential (FOP) ground resistance testing, which
has been used for over 80 years without much advancement, also has
significant limitations.
Using the FOP test, the grounding system being tested must be
disconnected from the equipment being grounded, deenergized, and
isolated - but this can be impossible to do in an operating
industrial facility where output and processes must be maintained.
Because FOP testing
doesn’t detect grounding discontinuities, the actual grounding rods
and connectors to be examined must be physically dug up. Given how
expensive and time-consuming this is, checking for
grounding discontinuities simply isn’t done on a routine basis.
Another drawback of FOP ground testing is that the recommended
distance between the grounding grid and current test probe can be
excessive–more than five times the diagonal distance of the
grounding grid. In a large industrial plant, such as a refinery,
this can require extending
the current probe several miles onto neighboring property or
roadways, an impractical or perhaps impossible task.
The FOP test, which has difficulty measuring low resistance grounds,
also has no assurance of accuracy.
“Because of the distance between test probes, weak injected signal
strength, and background noise, the FOP test has a poor signal to
noise ratio,” explains Dr. Sakis Meliopoulos, an IEEE Fellow and
Field Award Winner, and professor of electrical engineering at
Georgia Tech in Atlanta.
“Accuracy suffers when trying to measure low voltage on long leads
between test probes, with interference from potentially stronger
sources - such as stray current or electromagnetic interference/EMI
from nearby power circuits.”
Safer, More Effective Plant Production with Smart Ground Testing
Unsatisfied with the limitations of FOP and clamp-on ground test
methods for industrial use, Dr. Meliopoulos developed
a new type of ground multimeter with sponsorship from the Electric
Power Research Institute (EPRI). Output from the Smart Ground
Multimeter feeds into EPRI-approved advanced software.
Unlike the FOP and clamp-on methods, the Smart Ground Testing
equipment has been designed to operate on energized substations and
industrial grounds, minimizing downtime and protecting production
capacity. This can be done even when real estate is limited or the
surrounding
area saturated with roads or buildings because the leads between
test probes are relatively short - just twice the length of the
grounding system, instead of the FOP method’s five to 10 times the
distance.
For greater accuracy in discovering the root cause of industrial
grounding problems and for safer, improved plant production, Smart
Ground Testing combines several testing functions not available in
previous FOP and clamp-on methods. Because of the increased test
accuracy, grounding grid continuity can be verified and diagnosed
without the expensive, time-consuming digging up of grounding rods
and connectors that other approaches may require.
“Not only does the software reduce interference by compensating for
stray current, background noise and EMI, but also it is capable of
injecting a signal that is many hundreds of times greater than other
equipment,” explains Dr. Meliopoulos. “Together, this dramatically
improves the signal to noise ratio for more accurate grounding
measurement.”
While FOP ground tests typically employ a test signal with a
frequency indicating transient response at less than 420 Hertz,
Smart Ground Testing, for instance, raises this up to 2,500 Hertz.
And
where low impedance locations require higher currents for confident
results, the
best FOP ground tests do so with just 0.05 amps, compared to Smart
Ground
Testing’s up to 100 amps (a 2,000-fold difference).
“To give facility managers the statistical validity they need to
verify or upgrade grounding status, Smart Ground Testing also
generates thousands of test data points, compared to FOP’s typical
hundred
or less,” adds Lanzoni.
To generate these added data points, each of Smart Ground Testing’s
six voltage probes makes 10 computer-controlled current injections
in contrast to an FOP probe’s single current injection–a 60:1
difference.
“The added data and higher signal-to noise ratio of Smart Ground
Testing provide quantified confidence test levels that FOP and
clamp-on tests have never been able to make,” says Lanzoni. “The
result is unprecedented ground test accuracy and analysis. This
allows facility managers to
either verify their plant meets safe grounding specs or take
corrective action to protect plant safety and production.”
The Future: Preserving
Production, Preventing Peril
Facility managers who have stayed on top of important technology
developments to keep up production over the years, won’t want to let
aging grounding or inadequate ground testing blindside them now.
Simply put, the eventual data/equipment loss, process errors or
stopped production attributable to worsening grounding problems is
preventable if appropriate action is taken.
“Now is the time to look into advanced technology like Smart Ground
Testing if your plant’s grounding has never been accurately tested;
has sensitive equipment or an aging grounding system; experiences
process errors; is located in a lightning prone area; or you want to
remove a potentially serious source of production problems before
disaster strikes,” says Lanzoni.
You wouldn’t think of using 12-year old Windows 3.11 with your
current software so why would you trust your sensitive process
control equipment to technology that was developed 80 years ago?
Thousands of successful companies worldwide - including Fortune 1000
clients like Mobil, Bechtel, Motorola, Federal Express, General
Electric, NASA, and the FBI - trust LEC’s expertise in advanced
grounding technology to protect their sensitive computer,
communication and process control equipment.
“My engineering colleagues working in western Africa told me how
great the LEC equipment was, but the real proof for me was when we
finally got it installed,” said R. F. Heinschel, telecommunications
supervisor for Chevron in Papua, New Guinea. “We have not sustained
any telecommunications equipment damage for those sites that have
the LEC equipment installed. The equipment
has proved its value far beyond its initial cost.”
Using proven scientific and engineering methods and principles for
analyzing system reliability, LEC consults on problems related to
grounding, surge suppression, and comprehensive lightning
protection.
The company’s Dissipation Array Systems that include grounding and
surge suppression
equipment are installed in over 55 countries. FSM
For more info about Smart Ground Testing Program services and
evaluations, or about LEC’s consulting services, email info@lightningeliminators.com;
or visit their website at www.lightningeliminators.com. Del
Williams is a technical writer based in Torrance, CA. |
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