Suggestion to jghrist (Electrical) May 2, 2003 marked ///\\\
I finally got around to reviewing your Stevenson reference drawings. All show ground connected to the neutral. Do you know of any references that show zero-sequence equivalents of corner grounded systems? Either transformer windings with an isolated X0
///Reference:
1. IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INDUSTRY APPLICATIONS, VOL. 36, NO. 6, NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2000 1741
The Use of Low-Voltage Current-Limiting Fuses to
Reduce Arc-Flash Energy
Richard L. Doughty, Fellow, IEEE, Thomas E. Neal, Terry L. Macalady, Vincent Saporita, Member, IEEE, and
Kenneth Borgwald
Includes:
"Another grounding scheme that was quite popular, and is still being used, is the corner-grounded delta system. One corner of the delta is intentionally grounded, and has no overcurrent protection in that phase. (A fuse can be used in the grounded phase if it is providing motor running (overload) protection, or a three-pole circuit breaker can be used if all three poles open simultaneously.) The advantage of such a system is that 1/3 of potential ground faults are eliminated because one phase is already intentionally grounded. Faults from either of the other two energized phases are at full line-line voltage and require overcurrent devices capable of handling the phase–phase voltage across only one pole. While the corner-grounded delta system offers help by eliminating 1/3 of the phase-to-ground faults, and no help for energized phase-to-phase or energized phase-to-ground faults, the addition of current-limiting fuses for phase-to-phase
and three-phase arcing faults also minimizes arc-flash hazards associated with these systems."
Evidently, if a line-to-line to ground fault happens such a way that the conductors to the load will be ungrounded, then there will be current flowing through the ground to the corner grounded delta. This ground current will be equal to the zero sequence current Io multiplied by 2 since there will be no current flowing from the grounded delta corner to the load.\\