Grounding Study in Refinery

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Isaiah

Senior Member
Location
Baton Rouge
Occupation
Electrical Inspector
The Client wants a grounding study in order to "help determine the required number and type of ground rods required to meet the desired resistance level of 5 ohms, plant wide"....Is this a legitimate, realistic request for a system (refinery) governed by NEC?
For Utility High-Voltage Substations, step-touch is more critical (IEEE-80) but with refineries and chem plants we usually simply drove more rods when needed.
Thanks in advance.
Isaiah
 

roger

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Fl
Occupation
Retired Electrician
The Client wants a grounding study in order to "help determine the required number and type of ground rods required to meet the desired resistance level of 5 ohms, plant wide"....Is this a legitimate, realistic request for a system (refinery) governed by NEC?

Isaiah
No it is not, the NEC doesn't require a level at all after two rods are driven. You can drive rod after rod and maybe get to a certain value but tomorrow when the weather and soil conditions change it can be out the window.

Roger
 

Isaiah

Senior Member
Location
Baton Rouge
Occupation
Electrical Inspector
No it is not, the NEC doesn't require a level at all after two rods are driven. You can drive rod after rod and maybe get to a certain value but tomorrow when the weather and soil conditions change it can be out the window.

Roger

Thanks Roger - exactly my thoughts.
 

JoeStillman

Senior Member
Location
West Chester, PA
I saw a request like this once. It came from a client who thought you needed extra-low resistance in order to be sure there was enough current to trip non-GFI breakers on a ground-fault. They applied ohm's law to the code-minimum 25 ohms and said 120V / 25Ω = 4.8 amps = no trip!. They needed to be persuaded that proper equipment grounding and especially, bonding were more important than lowering neutral-to-ground resistance.

Those green wires are really a redundant neutral in a fault-to-ground situation.
 
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