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IAEI News>Issue Listing>July/August 2004 >Grounding Electro-Magnetic Interference Study (GEMI)
Newly appointed Executive Director J. Phillip Simmons approached me and asked if I knew where Eustace C. Soares got his information to develop the tables for his book, Grounding Electrical Distribution Systems for Safety. Phil was referring particularly to those related to acceptable lengths of steel conduit and tubing for equipment grounding. I told Phil that I did not know but would try to find out. He told me that IAEI was interested in including this empirical data to back up the information in the 1993 revision of Soares Book on Grounding, 5th edition. Phil asked if the steel conduit manufacturers would consider sponsoring testing to validate the data in the Soares tables. I made some calls to old friends that knew Eustace Soares personally. They did not believe he had done any actual testing to write the book and develop the tables. They thought the data he had used was from old IEEE papers and testing done by R.H. "Dick" Kaufman in the early 1950s. Photo 1. Original Grounding Electrical Distribution Systems for Safety by Eustace C. Soares, copyrighted in 1966. Photo 2. After IAEI acquired the rights to the Soares publication, it was renamed Soares Book on Grounding as shown in this fifth edition revised in 1993. Although the IAEI request was the major factor in deciding to develop GEMI, another factor was revisions to the 1993 NEC. For example, "250-95 Exception 3 Where a raceway or a cable armor or sheath is used as the equipment grounding conductor, as provided in sections 250-51, 250-57(a), 250-73 and 250-91(b)." The changes made it clear that all metallic raceway, metallic armor or metal-sheathed, copper and aluminum equipment grounding conductors, or the combination thereof, must be sized and installed in a manner that creates a permanent, low-impedance circuit capable of safely carrying the maximum ground-fault current likely to be imposed on it from any point on the wiring system. The conduit and tubing manufacturers wanted to be able to provide documentation that their steel conduit met these NEC requirements and provided an excellent low impedance ground fault return path. Although the NEC section references have changed, the basic requirements have not. All of the equipment grounding conductors in NEC 2002 Section 250.118 are only acceptable if they are sized to provide this required effective ground-fault current path in the event of a ground fault. NEC 2002 110.10
NEC 2002 250.4(A) "(3) Bonding of Electrical Equipment. Non–current-carrying conductive materials enclosing electrical conductors or equipment, or forming part of such equipment, shall be connected together and to the electrical supply source in a manner that establishes an effective ground-fault current path. "(4) Bonding of Electrically Conductive Materials and Other Equipment. Electrically conductive materials that are likely to become energized shall be connected together and to the electrical supply source in a manner that establishes an effective ground-fault current path. "(5) Effective Ground-Fault Current Path. Electrical equipment and wiring and other electrically conductive material likely to become energized shall be installed in a manner that creates a permanent, low-impedance circuit capable of safely carrying the maximum ground-fault current likely to be imposed on it from any point on the wiring system where a ground fault may occur to the electrical supply source. The earth shall not be used as the sole equipment grounding conductor or effective ground-fault current path."
Mr. Simmons’ request was presented to the NEMA 5RN Technical Committee and they agreed to sponsor the testing. The first priority was to select a facility and electrical research scientist with impeccable credentials. Section Chairman Al Flanders, Picoma, and Bill Beile, Allied Tube and Conduit, resolved this by locating the top expert in the field of grounding, Dr. A. P. "Sakis" Meliopoulos with the Georgia Institute of Technology (GA-Tech). Dr. Meliopoulos had presented numerous papers on the subject and was highly respected. The School of Engineering at GA-Tech was capable of providing both the facility and the credibility we were looking for. I then told Phil Simmons we would do the testing. The first step was to develop a scope for the project. This was accomplished by Dr. Meliopoulos’ review of Soares Book on Grounding. He checked the tables using existing data on the properties of steel conduit and tubing such as the resistance and permeability of the steel. Based on that information, Dr. Meliopoulos reported that testing could be done and a computer program could be developed to confirm the calculations. An agreement was reached between GA-Tech and NEMA 5RN Section to proceed. The next step was lab tests. These were all done at GA-Tech. They obtained conduit and tubing from local supply houses, which they used for developing new data. All the existing data on steel was obtained from old process (Bessemer Furnace) steel. The conduit today is made from steel produced in electronic furnaces, a much cleaner process. Therefore, updated resistance and permeability tests were needed. Photo 3 and Photo 4. Kearney Laboratories Outdoor Test Site in McCook, Illinois. This is the large transformer used for the tests and all data was recorded with instruments inside the building. All data was recorded by Kearney’s engineering department and Dr. Meliopoulos using separate test instruments. This was done to validate the data. Computer Model Validation Software Developed Dr. Meliopoulos was able to determine that the original Soares tables developed almost thirty years earlier were essentially correct. He found only minor differences and only a few errors. It is important to note that when a fault occurs in a circuit, all resistance must be calculated including the circuit conductor and the return path to establish the total impedance in the fault path. For example, when designing or selecting a wiring method to install a 200-ampere 208/120-volt feeder to a sub-panel in a large warehouse located 250 foot from the service to comply with 110.10 and 250.4(A) (3), (4) and (5):
Other wiring methods not utilizing steel conduit or tubing, but utilizing only a copper or aluminum equipment grounding conductor sized to Table 250.122 would not comply without increasing the sizes.
Note: as you can see, compliance is obtainable using any of the methods permitted in 250.118. However, GEMI makes the necessary calculations very easy. The program retains the parameters of the last designed system, so you can quickly and easily change raceways and conductors and recalculate. Power Quality and Harmonics The next phase of testing to address these issues was sponsored by the steel conduit and tubing manufacturers through the Steel Tube Institute of North America. We again met with Dr. Meliopoulos at GA-Tech and he told us only laboratory tests were needed to add the additional features to the GEMI software. An agreement was reached and a written report was developed, laboratory testing was completed, and the software was revised to include limited provisions to make "network analysis" calculations. This addition (from single circuit) would provide engineers with a tool for calculating the electromagnetic field intensity in milligauss around power circuits for effective conduit design. A multiple frequency feature was added for harmonic calculations. Figure 1, Figure 2, Figure 3, Figure 4, Figure 5, Figure 6 GEMI Design Capabilities • RMC Rigid Metal Conduit (steel) • RMC Rigid Metal Conduit (aluminum) • IMC Intermediate Metal Conduit (steel) • EMT electrical metallic tubing (steel) • Copper conductors • Aluminum conductors • RMC w/ supplementary ground wire • IMC w/ supplementary ground wire • EMT w/ supplementary ground wire Calculate magnetic field intensity around power circuits at multiple frequencies. Analyze new or existing wiring installations with linear and nonlinear loads. GEMI Research Continues The new software provides real time, reliable calculations based on your actual design parameters. Power Systems Engineering Research
Center (PSERC) The electric power industry is evolving from its historical business structure. The Power Systems Engineering Research Center (PSERC) draws on university capabilities to creatively address these challenges. Under the banner of PSERC, multiple U.S. universities are working collaboratively with industry to:
Conclusions
Richard E. Loyd is a nationally known author of five electrical books and many technical magazine articles. He is a consultant specializing in the National Electrical Code and the model building codes. He serves on two NEC committees: Code Making Panel 5, responsible for Grounding; and Panel 8, responsible for Raceways. He serves on the IEEE Power Systems Grounding Committee (Green Book). Mr. Loyd served as the chief electrical inspector and administrator for the states of Idaho and Arkansas. He has served as chairman of NFPA 79 Electrical Standard for Industrial Machinery, as a member of Underwriters Laboratories Advisory Electrical Council, as chairman for Educational Testing Service (ETS) multi-state Electrical Licensing Advisory Board. His book titles are: Electrical Raceways and Other Wiring Methods, 3rd edition (Delmar Publishers); Master Electrician’s Review, 3rd edition (Delmar Publishers); Journeyman Electrician’s Review, 3rd edition (Delmar Publishers); Wiring Methods Technical Reference, 1st edition (Delmar Publishers); Hazardous Technical Reference, 1st edition (Delmar Publishers).
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