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IAEI News>Issue Listing>November/December 2004 >Canadian Code— Making Ground-Fault Protection Work
This article looks at ground-fault protection in switchgear, what works and what doesn’t. We’ll look at some of the ways ground-fault protection may inadvertently become inoperable and what steps are needed to prevent this from happening. We will discuss some possible grounding schemes that are incompatible with ground fault sensing and may thereby disable your ground-fault protection equipment. What does the electrical code require? The Canadian Electrical Code, Rule 14-102 requires that solidly grounded 3-phase, 4-wire services or feeders must have ground-fault protection when an electrical circuit is:
Two of the more common ground fault sensing methods are zero-sequence and residually-connected current transformer arrangements for sensing ground faults. Both systems are prone to failure when combined with incorrect grounding. Zero-sequence ground fault sensing involves a large current transformer surrounding all four of the phase and the neutral busbars in a switchboard. This device is designed to measure the vector sum of all of the currents flowing in the neutral and all phases, which under normal conditions should equal zero, providing a zero measurement. But when a ground fault occurs, some of the current returning to its source of supply flows along a path outside the zero-sequence current transformer. In that case, the measured vector sum of all the phase and neutral currents is no longer zero. When the fault current reaches its preset ground fault trip level, the controlling circuit-breaker opens to safely isolate the fault. A residually-connected ground-fault protection system operates in a similar fashion, except that a smaller current transformer surrounds each phase and the neutral busbar. The outputs of all four current transformers are totalized to provide a signal that trips the controlling circuit breaker to isolate ground faults at a pre-set level. As mentioned above, either of these ground-fault protection methods will fail when combined with incorrect grounding. With either of these arrangements, it’s extremely important that the electrical system neutral be grounded only on the supply side of the zero-sequence or residually-connected current transformers. When grounds are connected on the load side, fault current can enter the neutral bus downstream from the current sensor(s), allowing fault current to return through them. The result? No available signal to trip the breaker, since vector sum of all the current measurements is now zero. Inadvertent load-side grounding can happen in several different ways.
As indicated in previous articles, you should always consult with the electrical inspection authority in each Province or Territory as applicable for a more precise interpretation of any of the above. Leslie Stoch, P.E. is principal of L. Stoch & Associates, providing electrical engineering and ISO 9000 quality systems consulting. Prior to that, he spent over 20 years with Ontario Hydro as an electrical inspection manager and engineer. Les holds a B.S. in electrical engineering from Concordia University in Montreal.
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