Abstract

At lightning discharge, the grounding systems’ transient behavior is influenced by time-dependent nonlinear behavior and frequency-dependent effects. These effects are related to complex phenomena arising from the soil ionization surrounding the conductors at high current and to the fast risetime of the impulse current, respectively. Most of the performed investigations were either focused on soil ionization effects or frequency-dependent effects. This paper proposes a model that incorporates both aspects including the mutual coupling and air–soil interface effects, giving a more realistic representation of the grounding systems behavior. Based on the transmission line approach, the model can compute the grounding systems transient response buried in uniform and nonuniform soil. The model is applied to horizontal, vertical electrodes, and grounding grid subjected to impulse currents of variable magnitudes and shapes. The model results are validated against published measurement results obtained with low-current and high-current impulses. The time-domain transient potential and transient impedances show good agreement with experimental results. Other impulse impedance parameters used for the grounding systems analysis are reproduced quite accurately. As an application, the impulse impedance of a horizontal electrode and a grounding grid buried in two-layer soil is discussed when the upper layer depth and the resistivity of soil layers are varied.

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