How does the Earth act as an electrical ground?

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    Electrical Ground
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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers on how the Earth functions as an electrical ground, particularly in residential electrical systems. Participants explore the nature of grounding, the materials involved, and the implications of grounding in various electrical contexts.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants note that while concrete is not a good conductor, moisture and minerals in the soil can enhance conductivity, allowing the Earth to serve as a ground.
  • Others argue that a proper ground connection requires a direct metal wire to the Earth, as buildings often sit on non-conductive materials like concrete.
  • A participant mentions the risks associated with grounding, such as stray voltages and potential electric shock hazards in high voltage scenarios.
  • Some contributions highlight the conceptual misunderstanding of "ground," suggesting it is simply another wire in the circuit and does not necessarily need to have low resistance.
  • There is a discussion about the Single Wire Earth Return (SWER) system, with mixed opinions on its safety and effectiveness compared to traditional grounding methods.
  • Participants express differing views on whether electrical systems can operate without a connection to Earth ground, with some asserting that they can, while others contest this claim.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express multiple competing views on the nature and effectiveness of grounding, with no clear consensus reached on the necessity of Earth ground for the operation of electrical systems.

Contextual Notes

Some claims about grounding effectiveness depend on specific conditions, such as soil composition and moisture levels, which are not universally applicable. The discussion also touches on safety regulations that vary by jurisdiction regarding grounding practices.

Danish_Khatri
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Earth acts as an electrical ground for the electrical supply that come to our home. But the ground, usually made of cement or stone is not a conductor like metal then how does it acts as an electrical ground.
 
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There is a "common" ground point somewhere outside house that goes to ground. Usually it is a thick wire without insulation on it. You can probably find yours if you look around your house, it is probably coupled with a pipe or something else so that it doesn't need its own hole coming out of the wall.
 
Dear could you please make it more detailed. I am a student of science, so it will not be a problem if you make it a little technically detailed.
 
Where a real ground connection has a significant resistance, the approximation of zero potential is no longer valid. Stray voltages or Earth potential rise effects will occur, which may create noise in signals or if large enough will produce an electric shock hazard.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth_ground"

This can be a serious problem for high voltage substations, power plants, or transmission lines. When there's a ground fault (say a transmission line down), the potential of the Earth rises. This is called http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth_potential_rise" . Depending on the soil conditions the fault can cause a potential difference between the feet of a person standing near an energized ground.
 
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But the ground, usually made of cement or stone is not a conductor like metal then how does it acts as an electrical ground.

What do you understand an electrical ground to be?
 
Dear could you please make it more detailed. I am a student of science, so it will not be a problem if you make it a little technically detailed.


Problem:

As you have stated, there is a desire to form a common ground in the electrical system of a building to the Earth. This common ground isn't inherent in the building design because as you pointed out most buildings sit on concrete which isn't a good conductor and therefore isolate the electrical system of the building from the Earth.


Solution:

Take a metal wire from the electical system of the building and run it outside of the building and into the Earth.


This is how the Earth acts a common ground for the electrical supply that comes into your home even though the your home sits on cement and stone.


I don't know how to state it any more technically, it is a very simple concept. It also sounds like you don't really understand how the common ground and electrical return work and differ.
 
Danish_Khatri said:
Earth acts as an electrical ground for the electrical supply that come to our home. But the ground, usually made of cement or stone is not a conductor like metal then how does it acts as an electrical ground.

soil with minerals mix with water become quite a good conductor. Electricians get Earth ground by pounding a 6' copper rod into the ground and use it as Earth ground. Nobody said it is a perfect conductor nor you suppose to use it as signal or power return, it just establish a reference and provide safety.
 
Something I found out the hard way when I was a teenager:

Concrete conducts electricity pretty well.
 
it is the moisture and minerals that conduct, not the concrete.
 
  • #10
Minerals?

Care to expound on that a bit more?


thanx!
 
  • #11
Ionized compounds that dissolves in water make the solution conductible. Like putting salt (NaCl) will make water conducting electricity. There are a lot of mineral salts that acts the same.

Concrete is porous and it is like a sponge contacting the earth.
 
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  • #12
"Ground" is widely misunderstood.

Conceptually "ground" is just another wire in the circuit. The difficult part to grasp is that it goes everywhere.

An electrical system will operate fine with no connection to "ground" just as it does in a flashlight or airplane.. The British call it "earth" which i prefer because that distinguishes it from 'circuit common'. In household electical systems 'circuit common' is tied solidly to 'earth' or 'ground' so that you, when touching an appliance, will not form the path of least resistance from circuit common to earth-ground.

Simplify your thinking - there's a lot to be learned about 'grounding' just by contemplating the humble flashlight.

Google "IEEE Green Book"

old jim
 
  • #13
"Ground" is widely misunderstood.

Hear Hear.

The property which makes something a 'ground' is that it does not change its potential regardless of the current that flows in or out - within the limits of operation.
There is no requirement for the ground to possesses low resistance.

In many instances the planet Earth can act as such a source or sink.

https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=382007&highlight=earth&page=2
 
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  • #14
jim hardy said:
An electrical system will operate fine with no connection to "ground" just as it does in a flashlight or airplane.
This isn't necessarily ture.
Single wire Earth return (SWER) or single wire ground return is a single-wire transmission line for supplying single-phase electrical power from an electrical grid to remote areas at low cost. Its distinguishing feature is that the Earth (or sometimes a body of water) is used as the return path for the current, to avoid the need for a second wire (or neutral wire) to act as a return path.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single-wire_earth_return"
 
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  • #15
I have a neighbor who wired a barn that way, SWER. I told him it was a hazard.

I was not aware it is used in some places for medium voltage distribution. I was aware of its use in HVDC transmission where there is sophisticated protective equipment to keep it safe.

From same Wiki:
""Many national electrical regulations (notably the U.S.) require a metallic return line from the load to the generator.[12] In these jurisdictions, each SWER line must be approved by exception.""
and ""SWER systems are designed to limit the voltage in the Earth to 20 volts per meter to avoid shocking people and animals that might be in the area."
I hope they age gracefully. I wouldn't get close to one of them.

But as stated, ground is "just another wire" that goes everywhere.
If an engineer decides to use it for one of his current carrying conductors in an area frequented by humans, well, it's on his conscience.


old jim
 
  • #16
dlgoff said:
This isn't necessarily ture.
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So you don't believe that electronics in flashlights and airplanes will always work unless they are connected to Earth ground? I'm being sarcastic, of course, but I'd like an example of when you think it WOULD fail.
 
  • #17
phinds said:
So you don't believe that electronics in flashlights and airplanes will always work unless they are connected to Earth ground? I'm being sarcastic, of course, but I'd like an example of when you think it WOULD fail.
By "fail", you mean an open earth?
 
  • #18
No, I mean FAIL, which is what you said it would do. The original statement was "An electrical system will operate fine with no connection to "ground" just as it does in a flashlight or airplane.

Seems to me the opposite of "operate fine" is "fail".
 
  • #19
dlgoff said:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth_ground"

This can be a serious problem for high voltage substations, power plants, or transmission lines. When there's a ground fault (say a transmission line down), the potential of the Earth rises. This is called http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth_potential_rise" . Depending on the soil conditions the fault can cause a potential difference between the feet of a person standing near an energized ground.

dlgoff said:
This isn't necessarily ture.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single-wire_earth_return"

dlgoff said:
By "fail", you mean an open earth?

phinds said:
No, I mean FAIL, which is what you said it would do. The original statement was "An electrical system will operate fine with no connection to "ground" just as it does in a flashlight or airplane.

Seems to me the opposite of "operate fine" is "fail".
Where did I say FAIL. Sure flashlighs will work without a ground. What's the problem?
 
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  • #20
dlgoff said:
Where did I say FAIL. Sure flashlighs will work without a ground. What's the problem?

The original statement was "An electrical system will operate fine with no connection to "ground" just as it does in a flashlight or airplane." and you said that is not necessarily true.

Seems to me the opposite of "operate fine" is "fail". THAT's what I was responding to. Don't see what's confusing about that.


as for your statement:

This can be a serious problem for high voltage substations, power plants, or transmission lines. When there's a ground fault (say a transmission line down), the potential of the Earth rises. This is called Ground Potential Rise (GPR). Depending on the soil conditions the fault can cause a potential difference between the feet of a person standing near an energized ground.

I absolutely agree but this has nothing to do with electronics (radio's, TVs, flashlights, etc), it's about power distribution.
 
  • #21
phinds said:
The original statement was "An electrical system will operate fine with no connection to "ground" just as it does in a flashlight or airplane." and you said that is not necessarily true.
For a Single wire Earth return (SWER), if you don't have a ground, you don't have a circuit. What's so hard about that to understand? I'm out of here.
 
  • #22
Thank you guys. Your discussion was very helpful
 

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