OFR-63-77 Feasibility Study Of A Differential Current Ground Fault Or Leakage Current Sensor For Direct Current Offtrack Machines - 1.0 Introduction

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Robert R. Perron
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
59
File Size:
14939 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1976

Abstract

The U.S. Bureau of Mines is engaged in many diverse programs fur improving mine safety. One area of interest to the Bureau is new and improved means for minimizing the hazards of accidental gas ignition or electrical shock should the frame of an off-track machine assume potential above ground. Various means presently used to prevent such occurences are the use of ground fault detectors for phase to ground faults in ac machines, and grounding conductors and diodes in dc machines. In a three phase ac power center, a phase to ground fault may be detected by monitoring the current in the grounding resistor which is required between the power center neutral on the load side of the power center transformer and ground. Another method for detecting a ground fault is to pass the three load conductors through a toroidal core transformer. The phase currents vectorially add up to zero if none of the phases are faulted, and hence the voltage of the transformer secondary is either zero or not zero if one of the phases is unbalanced or faulted.
Citation

APA: Robert R. Perron  (1976)  OFR-63-77 Feasibility Study Of A Differential Current Ground Fault Or Leakage Current Sensor For Direct Current Offtrack Machines - 1.0 Introduction

MLA: Robert R. Perron OFR-63-77 Feasibility Study Of A Differential Current Ground Fault Or Leakage Current Sensor For Direct Current Offtrack Machines - 1.0 Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1976.

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