Lajo System and Circuit Grounding
Lajo System and Circuit Grounding
Lajo System and Circuit Grounding
GROUNDING
BEA LEIGH LORIA LAJO
BCE324 (7651)
GROUNDING
Grounding is required to protect building occupants and electrical
equipment.
Grounding an electrical system begins with a ground, an electrode in direct
contact with the earth itself.
GROUNDING CONDUCTOR
The grounding conductor is a continuous conductor that connects the
ground to the neutral bus bar and the grounding conductor bus bar in the
service equipment/main panelboard.
The grounding conductor does not normally carry current. Instead, it links
ground to the metal frames or housings of appliances and motors and the
metal boxes containing outlets and switches. If needed, the grounding
conductor can safely carry current to ground in the event of a lightning
strike or in cases of damage or defect in the circuiting, appliances, devices,
or equipment
GROUNDING
Grounding of an electrical branch circuit enables current to take an
alternate path back to the overcurrent protection device if an electrical
device or appliance short-circuits. It requires an additional, supplemental
wire, called the grounding conductor, which is connected to the appliance
cabinet or housing and provides an additional grounding path, in addition to
the grounded conductor.
GROUNDING REQUIREMENTS
In building electrical systems, there are two
types of grounding:
System Grounding
Equipment Grounding
SYSTEM GROUNDING
System grounding is that part of a building electrical
system that provides protection against electrical
shock, lightning, and fires.
• An underground metal water (not gas) pipe in direct contact with the earth for no less than 10 ft (3 m);
the metal building frame where it is effectively grounded.
• An electrode made of at least 20 ft (6 m) of electrically conductive steel reinforcing bars (No. 4 AWG or
greater) or bare copper wire no smaller than No. 2 AWG that is encased in at least 2 in of concrete that is
part of a foundation or footing in direct contact with the earth.
• An electrode made of a steel or iron plate that is at least 1⁄4 in thick or copper plate that is at least 0.06 in
thick with at least 2 ft2 (0.2 m2) of the plate surface in contact with exterior soil .
• An electrode made of a grounding ring of bare copper wire no smaller than No. 2 AWG that encircles the
building at a depth no less than 2.5 ft (0.75 m) below grade.
• The structural metal frame of the building where the frame is effectively grounded.
In systems where only a connection to an underground metal water pipe in direct contact with the earth
is the only means of grounding, a supplemental electrode is required. A metal pipe, rod, or plate driven or
placed into the earth are acceptable as a supplemental electrode.
EQUIPMENT GROUNDING
Equipment grounding refers to a grounding conductor or grounding path that
connects the noncurrent-carrying metal components of equipment. This may be
accomplished by installing an additional grounding conductor in all circuits or by
permanently bonding (joining) metal components such as metallic conduit in a
circuit to form a good conductive path. Equipment grounding extends from the
outlets to the neutral bus bar at the service entrance equipment.