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- Date: Wednesday, 31 July 1985
- From: Howard Hull
- Re: Lightning Protection
-
- Protecting one building or tower from lightning is fairly straightforward:
-
- 1. First order protection -
-
- On the tallest object associated with your structure, mount an
- extended umbrella-like fixture a few meters in diameter, with numerous
- sharp points along the periphery and across the crown, spaced about 1
- meter apart. (You can make the thing from re-bar and heavy duty
- chicken wire unless you have high winds like we have around here.)
- Use a large diameter conductor (1 to 2 cm.) to connect the umbrella
- points together at the center and thence down to a suitable ground
- stake located at a place where soil moisture is prevalent, but more
- importantly, try to make the conductor run in a straight line with
- *no* sharp corners; use a minimum radius of 1.5 meters on any bends in
- the ground wire. Keep this wire at least 2 meters from any power or
- communications conduit at all places along its route.
-
- Theory:
-
- The multitude of points will emit a trickle corona continuously,
- resulting in a space charge of ionized air within 20 meters of the
- umbrella. The space charge will terminate the cloud-to-ground
- electric field across a broad hemisphere and will reduce the local
- field gradient to a value below that needed to form "leaders". The
- umbrella will likely not ever be hit by lightning; however, the
- conductor gauge is set to minimize the damage inherent in such a
- strike. (A strike, if it occurs, will likely be a secondary,
- (resulting from the shift in electrostatic field just after a strike)
- to another object within a fraction of a km.) This approach, you
- should note, puts additional stress on your neighbors (they will see a
- slight rise in their hit statistics) as it only postpones the
- discharge until the cloud has moved past your installation. The
- ground conductor is spaced from other conduits so that the
- Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) associated with the 10000 Ampere surge
- will not be able to develop equivalent currents in parallel conductors
- adjacent to the ground wire. Using a large diameter and avoiding
- bends reduces the per length inductance discontinuities. This
- discourages the abandonment of your ground conductor in favor of
- nearby metal objects such as power conduits (resulting in hazardous
- elevation of the system ground potential to thousands of volts above
- the mains).
-
- 2. Second order protection -
-
- Protect your primary power entry by use of a surge protector having
- four main elements
-
- a.) Line fuses for each hot main NO FUSE FOR THE WHITE NEUTRAL. No
- circuit breakers (too slow).
-
- b.) Self extinguishing gas discharge tubes or arc chutes routed to a
- primary ground stake *separated* by 3 or more meters from the umbrella
- ground mentioned above, *not* using the same stake, even, and using
- the same linear routing algorithm mentioned above.
-
- c.) Heavy gauge inductors, 1 microhenry or thereabouts for typical 30
- to 50 Ampere per phase service levels, to choke the surge out of the
- consumer side of the system. NONE IN THE WHITE NEUTRAL.
-
- d.) Post choke line clamping to WHITE NEUTRAL. This is where the
- witchcraft comes in. One candidate is the Metal Oxide Varistor (MOV).
- They have two disadvantages: They age, gradually reducing their
- threshold over time until one day they evaporate in a ball of fire
- during a line surge. They have a rather remote threshold
- characteristic compared to, say, a Silicon TransZorb. They have
- several advantages: They are cheap. They come in packaging that is
- familiar to professional electricians. They are generally more robust
- than Selenium or Silicon protectors. They have a smaller geometry
- than a Selenium protector. Another candidate is a combination
- protector made up from a ground referenced 50 Ampere triac in series
- with either a lower rated voltage MOV or TransZorb element, with the
- triac gate wired back to (an artfully positioned) tap on the gas
- tube/arc chute ground. From here (this stuff belongs in a fire-rated
- NEMA box) the WHITE NEUTRAL and GREEN NEUTRAL are tied together at
- this one point only, and passed through a medium size conductor to the
- primary ground stake by a route that is separated by 1.5 meters from
- the gas tube/arc chute ground.
-
- Theory:
-
- If your power line gets hit, the gas tube fires and conducts the surge
- current to ground. The 20 kilovolts experienced by your service entry
- (for about 10 microseconds) will go through the chokes and will cause
- the MOV or complex protector shunt to break down and draw a steadily
- rising current (to many tens of Amperes), but immediately choked to a
- reduced voltage. The fuses will, after a while, be blown away. Until
- then, the MOVs will clamp the WHITE NEUTRAL to the mains (perhaps
- resulting in noticeable rise of the common-mode voltage). It is this
- common-mode elevation which destroys your out-of-building
- communications interfaces. With everything in the building coming to
- 2000 volts above your neighbors (including your local telephone
- operating company), any common-mode paths will be severely stressed.
- However, especially withing the building, they will be less stressed
- than they would have been if the mains were allowed to diverge from
- the WHITE NEUTRAL.
-
- 3. Third level protection
-
- The most effective common-mode protection is an Ultra-Isolator
- Transformer. It is also rather expensive compared to differential
- line protectors and secondary Silicon TransZorb protectors. Although
- many Ultra-Isolator Transformers were utilized during the 1970's by
- sensitive computer installations, it was realized eventually that the
- most damage to main-frame equipment was done by differential surges
- (main to main on three-phase systems). The common-mode threat was
- seen as too little to justify the cost and complexity of installation
- of an ultra-isolator, which, by the way, can also be done
- ineffectively, resulting in no net improvement in the level of
- protection. The companies that make ultra-isolators issue complete
- and effective instructions concerning their installation. The
- difficulty is in getting industrial electricians to follow the
- directions. Thus for the benefit of the main-frame and peripheral
- power supplies, for cost effective purposes, a good differential surge
- eliminator inside the enclosure of each system power supply is
- recommended. However, remember that the common mode is the most
- destructive to your distributed data communications peripherals;
- unfortunately, to protect them you must provide the entire computer
- room and distributed CRT terminal load with an ultra-isolator
- transformer, or see that each unit is designed to withstand momentary
- local and global differences of thousands of volts on the signal
- returns. Even then, on occasion, only one violator located in a
- critical location and tied to a non-isolated power system elsewhere in
- the building can blow the whole scheme.
-
- Theory:
-
- Not much theory here. The entire primary winding of the transformer
- may get lifted to 2000 volts, but the secondary remains referenced to
- the computer room ground stake. The box shields around the the
- windings are tied to the stake, and short out the electric field that
- might otherwise couple to the secondary. Saturation of the
- transformer core protects the differential mode. The differential
- protectors installed in each power supply dissipate the surges locally
- and since each takes a small part of the surge energy, no
- concentration of damage will likely occur.
-
- 4. Fourth order protection
-
- You may get surge protectors for all communication lines leaving the
- building. Each will need a reliable path to a stout ground. (DEC
- usually specifies that the computer frame GREEN WIRE ground be done
- with a heavy gauge wire, and all surge protector grounds be separately
- returned to the distribution transformer secondary neutral grounding
- point.) You may add Silicon TransZorbs to power supply rails in data
- communications equipment.
-
- Theory:
-
- If one of your comm lines gets hit, or gets involved in an induced
- surge, the elevation in voltage not dissipated by the protector is
- conducted through the internal diode clamps included in most IC line
- drivers and receivers to a ground or supply rail, and thence to a
- TransZorb (a back-to-back zener with a heavy silver anode and
- thermally conductive silver leads). If enough protectors are in
- place, the common-mode surge is clubbed to death by the collective
- capability of all peripheral surge protectors operating together.
-
- And that about does it. Needless to say, if you do a good job of
- protecting your site, and one of your neighbors gets hit, you may be
- damaged anyhow by currents resulting from the elevation of your
- neighbor's electrical ground. This is especially true in Hawaii (and
- even more so on their mountain tops) where the ground is made of lava
- rock. If you get hit by lightning, your entire site goes to 25000
- volts with respect to the surrounding neighborhood. This bleeds down
- to appx 2000 volts over the next 100 microseconds or so.
-
- If you have several buildings to worry about, such as may be the case
- for a university campus, putting an umbrella protector on every
- building will only cause the cloud to ground potential to develop to
- the point that when you finally do get a strike, it will be a *real
- killer*. It has been pointed out elsewhere that most lightning
- strikes are from the ground up to the cloud.
-
- Thus, More Theory (speculation):
-
- I suspect that the mechanism is something like this: Collisions of air
- molecules with each other and the things that make up the surface tend
- to knock electrons off the air molecules. There are other charge pair
- generation mechanisms as well, such as natural radioactive decay of
- Radon 222 and its decay products. (This specific mechanism is not my
- theory - see JGR Vol 90 No D4 Pgs 5909-5916 June 30, 1985, Edward A
- Martell, NCAR.) The electrons, because of their charge, are sticky.
- They cling to the surfaces of various semi-insulators (rocks and dry
- dirt) and near the surface of conductors until enough of them are
- implanted to provide a counter electrical field gradient to repel
- later arrivals. The positive air ions are separated by thermal
- energy, and molecular screening prevents the immediate recombination.
- The charge separation is effected by the rising of the warmed
- positively ionized air.
-
- Once the charge is separated, mutual repulsion drives the electrons
- into the conductive ground layers. Later, as the air rises and water
- condenses, positively charged droplets accumulate in descending air
- columns at the front of the storm just ahead of the rising column. A
- field gradient is thus established with respect to the ground, where
- all the electrons are. As the ground is conductive, the electrons
- follow the cloud until, with the aid of conductive moisture and the
- turbulence of the rising and descending air column interface, leaders
- are established and a strike path is ionized and carried into the
- descending air. The electrons travel up the path in a flash (parts of
- which will have oscillations at radio frequency) and then distribute
- themselves (at a more leisurely pace, accompanied with local flashes
- and secondary flashes) in accordance with upper level gradients until
- there is nolonger sufficient gradient to ionize the cloud-to-cloud
- paths.
-
- Time scales:
-
- Main strike and individual secondary strikes each about 10
- microseconds.
-
- Duration of ionized path, reversals and secondaries about 100
- microseconds.
-
- Duration of high altitude electrical coronae readjustment about 1
- millisecond.
-
- Localized differences in the final potential may result in some
- reverse strikes from a few overcharged negative clouds to the ground,
- or subsequently more numerously (after air motion), cloud to cloud
- "readjustments".
-
- Well, I've done it again. Darn. If this is too long, I suppose you
- should flame me for it, or if I am guilty of mis-representing known
- (un)truths, that would qualify as well. But I wanted to at least try
- to clear up the nature of lightning and its hazards a little.
-
- Howard Hull
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