Ground Fault For Micrologic Trip Units
Ground Fault For Micrologic Trip Units
09/2007
Data Bulletin Cedar Rapids, IA, USA
Replaces 0613DB9905 Dated 06/1999
It has been estimated that more than 85% of all faults begin as low-level
ground faults. Ground faults are an inadvertent flow of current between the
normal current-carrying conductors and ground. These ground faults usually
start at a low level and, if left undetected, escalate causing significant heat
and mechanical damage to the electrical system. In extreme cases, the
ground fault can escalate to a phase-to-phase fault causing major system
damage. The ground-fault systems in Micrologic trip units monitor the flow of
current in the system and detects ground-fault currents. The circuit breaker
will trip to protect the circuit, or send an alarm through the appropriate
interface equipment, depending on the option installed.
06133808
Ground-fault
Current
1
Ground-fault Systems for Circuit Breakers Equipped with Micrologic® Trip Units 0613DB9905R9/07
Data Bulletin 09/2007
Ground-Fault Alarm—Without All circuit breakers with Micrologic® 5.0P and 5.0H trip units come standard
Tripping with the ability to sense and report a ground-fault alarm through the optional
programmable contact module or communication network. A neutral current
sensor (NCT) must be installed in the neutral if ground-fault alarm is used on
a three-phase, four-wire system.
Residual Ground-Fault Sensing Residual ground-fault sensing systems use one current sensor for each
current-carrying conductor. The trip unit vectorially sums the secondary
outputs from each sensor to determine if there is a ground fault and the
magnitude of the ground fault. The following diagram shows the current
sensors for a three-phase, four-wire system. There is a current sensor on
each phase and the neutral.
Circuit Breaker
06133807
Trip Unit
The sensors for the phase conductors A, B and C are inside the circuit
breaker. The neutral current transformer is installed in the neutral. If the
circuit breaker were used on a three-phase, three-wire system, the neutral
current transformer would not be necessary.
Ground-Source Return Ground-source return ground-fault sensing systems use one current sensor
on the ground conductor. The current sensor measures the ground current
flow. The following diagram shows the current sensor for a three-phase, four-
wire system. Ground source return can also be used on grounded systems
which do not carry the neutral.
Circuit Breaker
06133806
A
B
C
Trip Unit
N
2
Ground-fault
1
Current Interface Module
Sensor
Modified Differential Ground-Fault A modified differential ground-fault system is used for multiple sourced
System (MDGF) systems. Normal residual and ground-source return systems will not
correctly sum all of the circulating currents caused by the multiple neutral
paths and multiple grounds. The following diagram shows a typical main-tie-
main system. Each source transformer is grounded, and the service entrance
neutral is bonded to ground. Multiple neutral paths allow neutral current to
circulate and return to the supplying transformer by several different paths.
The ground-fault system must be capable of correctly summing these
circulating currents to minimize nuisance tripping and maximize protection.
The modified differential ground-fault sensing system requires the use of
optional ground-fault interface modules and current sensors installed in all
normal current-carrying conductors.
The current sensors and ground-fault interface modules must be wired in
parallel and the polarity of the current sensors must be maintained per the
installation and wiring instructions included with the ground-fault interface
module.
Source A
06133809
Source B
06133809
Ground-fault
Interface
Ground-fault
Modules
Interface
Modules
2 2
2 2
AA BB CC NN NN CC BB AA
FFeeeeddeerr LLooaaddss ((BBuuss AA)) FFeeeeddeerr LLooaaddss ((BBuuss BB))