Mr tszpun (Industrial)(OP)8 Apr 23 18:44
"...In fault current studies it often shows that whenever there is a fault, the current is flowing to the ground and it comes back flowing to the neutral. How is that even possible? Is it the same current that flowed to the ground? Can somebody explain me what is happenning there physically? "
I look at it this way:
1. A single-phase stand alone transformer with say L and N terminals, with the N is not grounded. When the L is dead short to the ground, there is NO current flow through the ground. The circuit is not complete because the N is isolated from ground.
1.1 Same as above, but with N connected to the ground. When the L is shorted to the ground, there is current flow through the ground. The current flow from the shorting to ground point > ..... ground (acting as a conductor) ......> the transformer N, which is grounded. The circuit is complete.
2. Now consider the single-phase source is from the utility where the N is grounded at the utility transformer. When a short from L to ground, the current flows through ground as above 1.1 .
3. If the utility source is 3-ph + N , where the N is grounded at the utility transformer, a phase short to ground will have current flow through the ground as explained in above 1.1 .
4. If the source is 3-ph without N or the N is NOT groaned (i.e. isolated from the ground):, any phase shorted to the ground will have NO current flow through the ground.
Note: capacitive current is not considered here.
Che Kuan Yau (Singapore)