DocumentCode
2084554
Title
Soil properties, GPS, arcview, and soil resistivity provide tools for protecting electrical equipment from lightning and heat
Author
Burr, Jamie ; James, Harry ; Hamon, Christopher
Author_Institution
The Pork Group, USA
fYear
2000
fDate
2000
Abstract
Resistivity measurements determine the number of chemically enhanced grounding rods needed to provide protection from lightning strikes and mechanical heating of electrical equipment. Soil physical properties such as texture, rock content, soil thickness, and water content determine resistivity and grounding potential. A study was initiated to (1) establish a database of electrical resistivity properties for several soil series in southwest Missouri, (2) correlate several soil properties to electrical resistivity, and (3) gather data to aid in determining the number of enhanced grounding rods needed at each site with electrical equipment. Recommendations made regarding installation of grounding rods have resulted in protection of electrical equipment at all sites
Keywords
earth electrodes; electrical resistivity; lightning protection; power apparatus; soil; GPS; arcview; chemically enhanced grounding rods; electrical equipment protection; electrical resistivity properties database; enhanced grounding rods; grounding potential; heat protection; lightning protection; lightning strikes protection; mechanical heating protection; rock content; soil physical properties; soil properties; soil resistivity; soil thickness; southwest Missouri; texture; water content; Chemicals; Conductivity measurement; Electric resistance; Global Positioning System; Grounding; Lightning; Protection; Resistance heating; Soil properties; Water;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Rural Electric Power Conference, 2000
Conference_Location
Louisville, KY
Print_ISBN
0-7803-5905-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/REPCON.2000.848053
Filename
848053
Link To Document