Grounding, Electromagnetic Interference and the Power System Industry
Most electric power engineers must regularly deal with design and operational problems whereby portions of the phase currents following along undesirable paths result in various effects ranging from minor annoyances to spectacular failures. A significant number of these problems are related to grounding and electromagnetic interference. A good understanding of these subjects and appropriate engineering software tools is critical to every power utility which is concerned with the safety and reliability of its system and its responsibility towards the public and its employees. The following discussion underlines the importance of grounding and electromagnetic interference.
1. Power system networks, ideally, should carry balanced three-phase power currents on the network. Typically then, currents are restricted to flow along predetermined metallic paths or earth. In practice, however, there is always an unbalance due to unsymmetrical system components and loads. This results in current flows in so-called "unenergized paths" and earth. The result of this varies from imperceptible effects and minor annoyances, to significant equipment damage and safety hazards. In addition to these "steady-state" unbalance conditions, one must regularly deal with abnormal conditions ranging from naturally triggered fault conditions (such as lightning) to equipment malfunctions or failures and vandalism.
2. Although three-phase balanced normal and abnormal power flow analysis techniques are well understood and perfectly predictable, current flows outside the three phase network (i.e., earth, skywires, neutral wires, metallic sheaths and various conductive structures) are extremely difficult to estimate using conventional circuit theory or approximate methods, mainly because neutral currents are no longer constrained to flow along dedicated paths (such as skywires) but can freely flow in soil along complicated three-dimensional paths.
3. The effects of such current flows are numerous and encompass many power system specialities such as:
- Grounding and all its ramifications which range from:
- Electromagnetic interference problems such as:
- Magnetic and electric fields and related public issues which involve:
4. Accurate computation of such effects was virtually impossible (except for very simple generic cases) before the advent of the "computer" and "software" era. Nowadays, specialized software coupled to powerful computer platforms allow accurate predictions of these effects. The complexity of the phenomena however, requires not only engineering specialization and commitment but genuine management awareness and support in order that the benefits of this new knowledge acquisition result in significant returns on the investment. The direct and indirect benefits, however, can be phenomenal: typically 10 to 100 times the investment within the next five years and more than 1000 times within ten to twenty years. These benefits are summarized hereafter.
5. The benefits which result from investing in state-of-the-art accurate engineering analysis solutions to grounding and electromagnetic interference problems can be categorized as follows:
- Benefits to the power system utility:
- Benefits to the public as a result of:
- Benefits to the utility engineer who: