Earthing System: Low-Voltage Systems
Earthing System: Low-Voltage Systems
In electricity supply systems, an earthing system or grounding system is circuitry which connects parts of the
electric circuit with the ground (electricity), thus defining the electrical potential of the conductors relative to the
Earth's conductive surface. The choice of earthing system can affect the safety and electromagnetic compatibility
of the power supply. In particular, it affects the magnitude and distribution of short circuit currents through the
system, and the effects it creates on equipment and people in the proximity of the circuit. If a fault within an
electrical device connects a "hot" (unearthed) supply conductor to an exposed conductive surface, anyone
touching it while electrically connected to the earth will complete a circuit back to the earthed supply conductor
and receive an electric shock.
Regulations for earthing system vary considerably among countries and among different parts of electric systems.
Most low voltage systems connect one supply conductor to the earth (ground).
A protective earth (PE), known as an equipment grounding conductor in the US National Electrical Code, avoids
this hazard by keeping the exposed conductive surfaces of a device at earth potential. To avoid possible voltage
drop no current is allowed to flow in this conductor under normal circumstances, but fault currents will usually
trip or blow the fuse or circuit breaker protecting the circuit. A high impedance line-to-ground fault insufficient to
trip the overcurrent protection may still trip a residual-current device (ground fault circuit interrupter or GFCI in
North America) if one is present.
In contrast, a functional earth connection serves a purpose other than shock protection, and may normally carry
current. The most important example of a functional earth is the neutral in an electrical supply system. It is a
current-carrying conductor connected to earth, often, but not always, at only one point to avoid flow of currents
through the earth. The NEC calls it a groundED supply conductor to distinguish it from the equipment
groundING conductor. Examples of devices that use functional earth connections include surge suppressors and
electromagnetic interference filters, certain antennas and measurement instruments.
Low-voltage systems
In low-voltage distribution networks, which distribute the electric power to the widest class of end users, the main
concern for design of earthing systems is safety of consumers who use the electric appliances and their protection
against electric shocks. The earthing system, in combination with protective devices such as fuses and residual
current devices, must ultimately ensure that a person must not come into touch with a metallic object whose
potential relative to the person's potential exceeds a "safe" threshold, typically set at about 50 V.
In most developed countries, 220/230/240 V sockets with earthed contacts were introduced either just before or
soon after World War II, though with considerable national variation in popularity. In the United States and
Canada, 120 volt power outlets installed before the mid-1960s generally did not include a ground (earth) pin. In
the developing world, local wiring practice may not provide a connection to an earthing pin of an outlet.
In the absence of a supply earth, devices needing an earth connection often used the supply neutral. Some used
dedicated ground rods. Many 110 V appliances have polarized plugs to maintain a distinction between "live" and
"neutral", but using the supply neutral for equipment earthing can be highly problematical. "Live" and "neutral"
might be accidentally reversed in the outlet or plug, or the neutral-to-earth connection might fail or be improperly
installed. Even normal load currents in the neutral might generate hazardous voltage drops. For these reasons,
most countries have now mandated dedicated protective earth connections that are now almost universal.
If the fault path between accidentally energized objects and the supply connection has low impedance, the fault
current will be so large that the circuit over current protection device (fuse or circuit breaker) will open to clear
the ground fault. Where the earthing system does not provide a low-impedance metallic conductor between
equipment enclosures and supply return (such as in a TT separately earthed system), fault currents are smaller,
and will not necessarily operate the over current protection device. In such case a residual current detector is
installed to detect the current leaking to ground and interrupt the circuit.
IEC terminology[edit]
International standard IEC 60364 distinguishes three families of earthing arrangements, using the two-letter codes
TN, TT, and IT.
The first letter indicates the connection between earth and the power-supply equipment (generator or
transformer):
The second letter indicates the connection between earth and the electrical device being supplied:
TN networks[edit]
In a TN earthing system, one of the points in the generator or transformer is connected with earth, usually the star
point in a three-phase system. The body of the electrical device is connected with earth via this earth connection
at the transformer.
The conductor that connects the exposed metallic parts of the consumer's electrical installation is called protective
earth (PE; see also: Ground). The conductor that connects to the star point in a three-phase system, or that carries
the return current in a single-phase system, is called neutral (N). Three variants of TN systems are distinguished:
TN−S
PE and N are separate conductors that are connected together only near the power source. This
arrangement is the current standard for most residential and industrial electric systems particularly in
Europe.[citation needed]
TN−C
A combined PEN conductor fulfills the functions of both a PE and an N conductor. Rarely used.
TN−C−S
Part of the system uses a combined PEN conductor, which is at some point split up into separate PE and N
lines. The combined PEN conductor typically occurs between the substation and the entry point into the
building, and separated in the service head. In the UK, this system is also known as protective multiple
earthing (PME), because of the practice of connecting the combined neutral-and-earth conductor to real
earth at many locations, to reduce the risk of broken neutrals - with a similar system in Australia and New
Zealand being designated as multiple earthed neutral (MEN).
TN-S: separate protective earth (PE) TN-C: combined PE and N conductor TN-C-S earthing system: combined
and neutral (N) conductors from all the way from the transformer to the PEN conductor from transformer to
transformer to consuming device, consuming device. building distribution point, but separate
which are not connected together at PE and N conductors in fixed indoor
any point after the building distribution wiring and flexible power cords.
point.
It is possible to have both TN-S and TN-C-S supplies from the same transformer. For example, the sheaths on
some underground cables corrode and stop providing good earth connections, and so homes where "bad earths"
are found get converted to TN-C-S.
TT network
In a TT earthing system, the protective earth connection of the consumer is provided by a local connection to
earth, independent of any earth connection at the generator.
The big advantage of the TT earthing system is that it is clear of high and low frequency noises that come through
the neutral wire from connected equipment. TT has always been preferable for special applications like
telecommunication sites that benefit from the interference-free earthing. Also, TT does not have the risk of a
broken neutral.
In locations where power is distributed overhead and TT is used, installation earth conductors are not at risk
should any overhead distribution conductor be fractured by, say, a fallen tree or branch.
In pre-RCD era, the TT earthing system was unattractive for general use because of its worse capability of
accepting high currents in case of a live-to-PE short circuit (in comparison with TN systems). But as residual
current devices mitigate this disadvantage, the TT earthing system becomes attractive for premises where all AC
power circuits are RCD-protected.
The TT earthing system is used throughout Japan, with RCD units in most industrial settings. This can impose
added requirements on variable frequency drives and switched-mode power supplies which often have substantial
filters passing high frequency noise to the ground conductor.
IT network
In an IT network, the electrical distribution system has no connection to earth at all, or it has only a high
impedance connection. In such systems, an insulation monitoring device is used to monitor the impedance.
Comparison
Other terminologies
While the national wiring regulations for buildings of many countries follow the IEC 60364 terminology, in North
America (United States and Canada), the term "equipment grounding conductor" refers to equipment grounds and
ground wires on branch circuits, and "grounding electrode conductor" is used for conductors bonding an earth
ground rod (or similar) to a service panel. "Grounded conductor" is the system "neutral". Australian and New
Zealand standards use a modified PME earthing system called Multiple Earthed Neutral (MEN). The neutral is
grounded(earthed) at each consumer service point thereby effectively bringing the neutral potential difference to
zero along the whole length of LV lines.
Properties
Cost
TN networks save the cost of a low-impedance earth connection at the site of each consumer. Such a
connection (a buried metal structure) is required to provide protective earth in IT and TT systems.
TN-C networks save the cost of an additional conductor needed for separate N and PE connections.
However, to mitigate the risk of broken neutrals, special cable types and lots of connections to earth are
needed.
TT networks require proper RCD (Ground fault interrupter) protection.
Safety
In TN, an insulation fault is very likely to lead to a high short-circuit current that will trigger an
overcurrent circuit-breaker or fuse and disconnect the L conductors. With TT systems, the earth fault loop
impedance can be too high to do this, or too high to do it within the required time, so an RCD (formerly
ELCB) is usually employed. Earlier TT installations may lack this important safety feature, allowing the
CPC (Circuit Protective Conductor or PE) and perhaps associated metallic parts within reach of persons
(exposed-conductive-parts and extraneous-conductive-parts) to become energized for extended periods
under fault conditions, which is a real danger.
In TN-S and TT systems (and in TN-C-S beyond the point of the split), a residual-current device can be
used for additional protection. In the absence of any insulation fault in the consumer device, the equation
IL1+IL2+IL3+IN = 0 holds, and an RCD can disconnect the supply as soon as this sum reaches a threshold
(typically 10-500 mA). An insulation fault between either L or N and PE will trigger an RCD with high
probability.
In IT and TN-C networks, residual current devices are far less likely to detect an insulation fault. In a TN-
C system, they would also be very vulnerable to unwanted triggering from contact between earth
conductors of circuits on different RCDs or with real ground, thus making their use impracticable. Also,
RCDs usually isolate the neutral core. Since it is unsafe to do this in a TN-C system, RCDs on TN-C
should be wired to only interrupt the live conductor.
In single-ended single-phase systems where the Earth and neutral are combined (TN-C, and the part of
TN-C-S systems which uses a combined neutral and earth core), if there is a contact problem in the PEN
conductor, then all parts of the earthing system beyond the break will rise to the potential of the L
conductor. In an unbalanced multi-phase system, the potential of the earthing system will move towards
that of the most loaded live conductor. Such a rise in the potential of the neutral beyond the break is
known as a neutral inversion.[1] Therefore, TN-C connections must not go across plug/socket connections
or flexible cables, where there is a higher probability of contact problems than with fixed wiring. There is
also a risk if a cable is damaged, which can be mitigated by the use of concentric cable construction and
multiple earth electrodes. Due to the (small) risks of the lost neutral raising 'earthed' metal work to a
dangerous potential, coupled with the increased shock risk from proximity to good contact with true earth,
the use of TN-C-S supplies is banned in the UK for caravan sites and shore supply to boats, and strongly
discouraged for use on farms and outdoor building sites, and in such cases it is recommended to make all
outdoor wiring TT with RCD and a separate earth electrode.
In IT systems, a single insulation fault is unlikely to cause dangerous currents to flow through a human
body in contact with earth, because no low-impedance circuit exists for such a current to flow. However, a
first insulation fault can effectively turn an IT system into a TN system, and then a second insulation fault
can lead to dangerous body currents. Worse, in a multi-phase system, if one of the live conductors made
contact with earth, it would cause the other phase cores to rise to the phase-phase voltage relative to earth
rather than the phase-neutral voltage. IT systems also experience larger transient overvoltages than other
systems.
In TN-C and TN-C-S systems, any connection between the combined neutral-and-earth core and the body
of the earth could end up carrying significant current under normal conditions, and could carry even more
under a broken neutral situation. Therefore, main equipotential bonding conductors must be sized with this
in mind; use of TN-C-S is inadvisable in situations such as petrol stations, where there is a combination of
lots of buried metalwork and explosive gases.
Electromagnetic compatibility
In TN-S and TT systems, the consumer has a low-noise connection to earth, which does not suffer from
the voltage that appears on the N conductor as a result of the return currents and the impedance of that
conductor. This is of particular importance with some types of telecommunication and measurement
equipment.
In TT systems, each consumer has its own connection to earth, and will not notice any currents that may
be caused by other consumers on a shared PE line.
Regulations
In the United States National Electrical Code and Canadian Electrical Code the feed from the distribution
transformer uses a combined neutral and grounding conductor, but within the structure separate neutral
and protective earth conductors are used (TN-C-S). The neutral must be connected to earth only on the
supply side of the customer's disconnecting switch.
In Argentina, France (TT) and Australia (TN-C-S), the customers must provide their own ground
connections.
Japan is governed by PSE law, and uses TT earthing in most installations.
In Australia, the Multiple Earthed Neutral (MEN) earthing system is used and is described in Section 5 of
AS 3000. For an LV customer, it is a TN-C system from the transformer in the street to the premises, (the
neutral is earthed multiple times along this segment), and a TN-S system inside the installation, from the
Main Switchboard downwards. Looked at as a whole, it is a TN-C-S system.
In Denmark the high voltage regulation (Stærkstrømsbekendtgørelsen) and Malaysia the Electricity
Ordinance 1994 states that all consumers must use TT earthing, though in rare cases TN-C-S may be
allowed (used in the same manner as in the United States). Rules are different when it comes to larger
companies.
Application examples
Most modern homes in Europe have a TN-C-S earthing system. The combined neutral and earth occurs
between the nearest transformer substation and the service cut out (the fuse before the meter). After this,
separate earth and neutral cores are used in all the internal wiring.
Older urban and suburban homes in the UK tend to have TN-S supplies, with the earth connection
delivered through the lead sheath of the underground lead-and-paper cable.
Older homes in Norway uses the IT system while newer homes use TN-C-S.
Some older homes, especially those built before the invention of residual-current circuit breakers and
wired home area networks, use an in-house TN-C arrangement. This is no longer recommended practice.
Laboratory rooms, medical facilities, construction sites, repair workshops, mobile electrical installations,
and other environments that are supplied via engine-generators where there is an increased risk of
insulation faults, often use an IT earthing arrangement supplied from isolation transformers. To mitigate
the two-fault issues with IT systems, the isolation transformers should supply only a small number of
loads each and should be protected with an insulation monitoring device (generally used only by medical,
railway or military IT systems, because of cost).
In remote areas, where the cost of an additional PE conductor outweighs the cost of a local earth
connection, TT networks are commonly used in some countries, especially in older properties or in rural
areas, where safety might otherwise be threatened by the fracture of an overhead PE conductor by, say, a
fallen tree branch. TT supplies to individual properties are also seen in mostly TN-C-S systems where an
individual property is considered unsuitable for TN-C-S supply.
In Australia, New Zealand and Israel the TN-C-S system is in use; however, the wiring rules currently
state that, in addition, each customer must provide a separate connection to earth via both a water pipe
bond (if metallic water pipes enter the consumer's premises) and a dedicated earth electrode. In Australia
and New Zealand this is called the Multiple Earthed Neutral Link or MEN Link. This MEN Link is
removable for installation testing purposes, but is connected during use by either a locking system
(locknuts for instance) or two or more screws. In the MEN system, the integrity of the Neutral is
paramount. In Australia, new installations must also bond the foundation concrete re-enforcing under wet
areas to the earth conductor (AS3000), typically increasing the size of the earthing, and provides an
equipotential plane in areas such as bathrooms. In older installations, it is not uncommon to find only the
water pipe bond, and it is allowed to remain as such, but the additional earth electrode must be installed if
any upgrade work is done. The protective earth and neutral conductors are combined until the consumer's
neutral link (located on the customer's side of the electricity meter's neutral connection) - beyond this
point, the protective earth and neutral conductors are separate.
Medium-voltage systems
In medium-voltage networks (1 kV to 72.5 kV), which are far less accessible to the general public, the focus of
earthing system design is less on safety and more on reliability of supply, reliability of protection, and impact on
the equipment in presence of a short circuit. Only the magnitude of phase-to-ground short circuits, which are the
most common, is significantly affected with the choice of earthing system, as the current path is mostly closed
through the earth. Three-phase HV/MV power transformers, located in distribution substations, are the most
common source of supply for distribution networks, and type of grounding of their neutral determines the earthing
system.
Solid-earthed neutral
Unearthed neutral
Resistance-earthed neutral
o Low-resistance earthing
o High-resistance earthing
Reactance-earthed neutral
Using earthing transformers
Solid-earthed neutral
In solid or directly earthed neutral, transformer's star point is directly connected to the ground. In this solution, a
low-impedance path is provided for the ground fault current to close and, as result, their magnitudes are
comparable with three-phase fault currents.[2] Since the neutral remains at the potential close to the ground,
voltages in unaffected phases remain at levels similar to the pre-fault ones; for that reason, this system is regularly
used in high-voltage transmission networks, where insulation costs are high.[3]
Unearthed neutral
In unearthed, isolated or floating neutral system, as in the IT system, there is no direct connection of the star
point (or any other point in the network) and the ground. As result, ground fault currents have no path to be closed
and thus have negligible magnitudes. However, in practice, the fault current will not be equal to zero: conductors
in the circuit — particularly underground cables — have an inherent capacitance towards the earth, which
provides a path of relatively high impedance.[4]
Systems with isolated neutral may continue operation and provide uninterrupted supply even in presence of a
ground fault.[2] However, while the fault is present, the potential of other two phases relative to the ground reaches
of the normal operating voltage, creating additional stress for the insulation; insulation failures may inflict
additional ground faults in the system, now with much higher currents.[3]
Presence of uninterrupted ground fault may pose a significant safety risk: if the current exceeds 4–5 A an electric
arc develops, which may be sustained even after the fault is cleared.[4] For that reason, they are chiefly limited to
underground and submarine networks, and industrial applications, where the reliability need is high and
probability of human contact relatively low. In urban distribution networks with multiple underground feeders,
the capacitive current may reach several tens of amperes, posing significant risk for the equipment.
The benefit of low fault current and continued system operation thereafter is offset by inherent drawback that the fault
location is hard to detect.[5]