WindTurbinesAreFine
Electrical
- Dec 9, 2009
- 28
Hello,
I have been reading this forum for quite some time, and have just recently signed up as a member.
First, a little bit of background on the issue:
We are doing a grounding study for a large generating station. This generating station has recently been upgraded with the addition of a new natural gas fired station adjacent to the old coal fired station and switchyard. The old coal fired powerhouse was shut down a number of years ago, and all of the equipment has since been removed. The switchyard is located directly behind this old powerhouse.
The city is trying to remediate this particular area from an industrial area into something 'green' and usable by the general public. The local utility has sold the powerhouse building to another company that wishes to turn the building into a recreation facility, or something else for use by the general public.
We are providing this study to the local utility as an independent third party study. We have modeled the grounding system as per the drawings provided, and input the test data that we had commissioned.
Here is the issue:
The study that another party has submitted to the utility has suggested that severing all grounding ties from the powerhouse to the main station grid would be the most effective way of ensuring safe touch and step potentials in the powerhouse building. We do not agree with this philosophy, and are actually recommending that the utility adds additional grounding around the perimeter of the building, and ensure that everything is securely bonded to the grid.
My question is:
Has anyone here had any experience in effectively isolating a building or structure that is very close (4 or 5 meters) to a main station grid? Is this even a practical solution? I'm concerned that during a fault situation, there would be enough magnetic coupling between the main station grid and the isolated powerhouse to induce an unsafe touch potential.
I am much more comfortable recommending a solution that is backed by the IEEE (solidly bonding everything) than to go with a solution that seems to be unsupported.
The fact that the general public (as opposed to trained utility workers wearing typical PPE) will regularly be on site, safety should be the main concern.
I have been reading this forum for quite some time, and have just recently signed up as a member.
First, a little bit of background on the issue:
We are doing a grounding study for a large generating station. This generating station has recently been upgraded with the addition of a new natural gas fired station adjacent to the old coal fired station and switchyard. The old coal fired powerhouse was shut down a number of years ago, and all of the equipment has since been removed. The switchyard is located directly behind this old powerhouse.
The city is trying to remediate this particular area from an industrial area into something 'green' and usable by the general public. The local utility has sold the powerhouse building to another company that wishes to turn the building into a recreation facility, or something else for use by the general public.
We are providing this study to the local utility as an independent third party study. We have modeled the grounding system as per the drawings provided, and input the test data that we had commissioned.
Here is the issue:
The study that another party has submitted to the utility has suggested that severing all grounding ties from the powerhouse to the main station grid would be the most effective way of ensuring safe touch and step potentials in the powerhouse building. We do not agree with this philosophy, and are actually recommending that the utility adds additional grounding around the perimeter of the building, and ensure that everything is securely bonded to the grid.
My question is:
Has anyone here had any experience in effectively isolating a building or structure that is very close (4 or 5 meters) to a main station grid? Is this even a practical solution? I'm concerned that during a fault situation, there would be enough magnetic coupling between the main station grid and the isolated powerhouse to induce an unsafe touch potential.
I am much more comfortable recommending a solution that is backed by the IEEE (solidly bonding everything) than to go with a solution that seems to be unsupported.
The fact that the general public (as opposed to trained utility workers wearing typical PPE) will regularly be on site, safety should be the main concern.