Earthing System Design: TN-S vs TN-C-S vs TT — Which to Choose and How to Calculate
TN-S, TN-C-S, and TT earthing systems each have different fault current paths, protection requirements, and failure modes. Learn how to select the right system and calculate earth fault loop impedance.
The earthing system determines how fault current returns to the source, how quickly protective devices operate, and what touch voltages people are exposed to during a fault. Get the earthing system wrong, and you either have protection that does not operate fast enough or fault current that flows through paths you did not intend — both of which can kill.
IEC 60364-1 defines three families of earthing systems: TN, TT, and IT. The TN family has three variants: TN-S, TN-C, and TN-C-S. Each has different characteristics for fault current magnitude, protection requirements, and electromagnetic interference. The choice is not arbitrary — it depends on the supply system, the installation type, and the specific hazards present.
I have spent eighteen years working with all three systems. In the mining industry in Sumbawa, we used TN-S exclusively underground — the consequences of a PEN conductor failure in a TN-C-S system in a wet, conductive environment are unacceptable. In commercial buildings, TN-C-S is the norm. In rural installations with long overhead supply lines, TT is often the only practical option. Each system has its place.
The Three Systems Explained
TN-S: Separate Neutral and Earth Throughout
In a TN-S system, the neutral (N) and protective earth (PE) conductors are separate throughout the entire installation, from the transformer star point to the final circuit.
Fault current path: Phase conductor to exposed metal to PE conductor to transformer star point. The entire path is through conductors — no current flows through the earth mass.
Key characteristic: High fault current. Because the earth fault loop is entirely metallic (low impedance), fault currents are high — typically 1-10 kA depending on the circuit. This means overcurrent protective devices (MCBs, fuses) operate quickly and reliably.
Advantages:
- Highest fault current — fastest protection operation
- No neutral current flows in the PE conductor — lowest electromagnetic interference
- No risk of PEN conductor failure putting live voltage on exposed metal
- Required for sensitive electronic equipment and data centres
Disadvantages:
- Requires a separate PE conductor throughout — additional copper cost
- Must be maintained as TN-S all the way back to the source
TN-C-S: Combined PEN Then Separated
In a TN-C-S system, the neutral and earth are combined in a single PEN (Protective Earth Neutral) conductor in the supply section (typically the utility supply cable), then separated into N and PE at the origin of the installation (the main switchboard).
Fault current path: Same as TN-S within the installation. In the supply section, fault current returns via the PEN conductor.
Key characteristic: Depends on the integrity of the PEN conductor. If the PEN conductor is broken or has a high-resistance connection, the voltage on the PE conductor rises to a dangerous level — potentially to full phase voltage on all exposed metalwork in the installation.
The PEN Conductor Failure Scenario
If the PEN conductor of a TN-C-S supply is broken (open circuit), the neutral of the installation becomes disconnected from the source neutral. Load current from other consumers on the same supply then flows through the installation's earth electrode (if one exists) or, worse, through the installation's exposed metalwork to reach a parallel earth path. Exposed metal in the installation can rise to a voltage approaching the full phase voltage (230 V). This is a known cause of electrocution in domestic installations.
Advantages:
- Lower cost than TN-S in the supply section (one less conductor)
- High fault current within the installation — fast protection operation
- Standard system for most urban supply networks worldwide
Disadvantages:
- PEN conductor failure risk (mitigated by supply authority bonding practices)
- Higher electromagnetic interference than TN-S (neutral current in PEN)
- Not suitable for certain hazardous environments
TT: Separate Source and Installation Earth
In a TT system, the source (transformer) has its own earth electrode, and the installation has a separate, independent earth electrode. There is no metallic connection between the two earth systems.
Fault current path: Phase conductor to exposed metal to installation earth electrode, through the earth mass to the source earth electrode, back to the transformer star point.
Key characteristic: Low fault current. The fault loop includes the resistance of two earth electrodes and the earth mass between them. This resistance is typically 10-200 ohm — far higher than the milliohm metallic path of a TN system. Fault currents are typically 1-20 A, which is too low for overcurrent protective devices (MCBs, fuses) to operate.
Protection requirement: RCDs (residual current devices) are mandatory for all circuits in a TT system. The RCD detects the imbalance between phase and neutral current caused by the fault current flowing to earth, and disconnects the circuit.
IEC 60364-4-41, Clause 411.5 — Fault protection — TT systemAdvantages:
- No dependence on the supply PEN conductor — immune to supply neutral faults
- Simple installation — no need for metallic earth continuity back to the source
- Suitable for rural areas with overhead supply lines
- Lower touch voltages under certain fault conditions
Disadvantages:
- Requires RCDs on all circuits — additional cost and complexity
- Earth electrode resistance must be maintained (corrosion, soil drying)
- Lower fault current may not clear high-impedance faults that an RCD does not detect
- Not suitable for installations with high earth leakage (large motor installations, long cable runs with high capacitance to earth)
Selection Guide: Which System to Use
| Criterion | TN-S | TN-C-S | TT |
|---|---|---|---|
| Supply type | Dedicated supply, substations | Urban mains supply | Rural, overhead lines |
| Fault current magnitude | High (1-10 kA) | High within installation | Low (1-20 A) |
| Protection method | Overcurrent devices | Overcurrent devices | RCDs mandatory |
| PEN failure risk | None | Present | None |
| EMC performance | Best | Moderate | Good |
| Mining / hazardous areas | Preferred | Avoid | Case-by-case |
| Data centres | Required | Acceptable | Avoid |
| Cost (supply section) | Highest | Moderate | Lowest |
| Earth electrode required | No | Optional (recommended) | Yes, mandatory |
For mining and heavy industrial installations, TN-S is the standard choice. The fault current is high and predictable, protection operates reliably, and there is no PEN conductor failure risk. At Batu Hijau, every underground installation was TN-S — the wet, conductive environment (rock bolts, steel mesh, water-filled floors) meant that any exposed metalwork at an elevated potential was a direct electrocution risk. We needed fault currents high enough to trip MCCBs within milliseconds.
Worked Example: Earth Fault Loop Impedance for TN-S
The critical calculation for a TN system is the earth fault loop impedance Zs. This must be low enough that the protective device disconnects within the required time (0.4 s for final circuits, 5 s for distribution circuits per IEC 60364-4-41 Table 41.1).
IEC 60364-4-41, Table 41.1 — Maximum disconnection timesScenario: A 32 A Type C MCB protects a final circuit in a TN-S installation at 230 V. We need to verify that the earth fault loop impedance is low enough for 0.4 s disconnection.
Step 1: Find the Required Tripping Current
A Type C MCB has an instantaneous magnetic trip range of 5-10 times the rated current. For guaranteed operation within 0.4 s, the fault current must exceed the upper bound of the magnetic trip range:
Minimum Tripping Current
I_trip = 10 x I_n = 10 x 32 = 320 A
BS 7671 Table 41.3 provides the maximum Zs values directly. For a 32 A Type C MCB:
Maximum Zs = 0.72 ohm (at 0.4 s disconnection time)
This corresponds to a minimum fault current of approximately Uo/Zs = 230/0.72 = 319 A.
Step 2: Calculate the Actual Earth Fault Loop Impedance
The earth fault loop consists of:
- Source impedance (transformer winding + supply cable) — typically provided by the supply authority as Ze (external earth fault loop impedance)
- Phase conductor impedance of the circuit (R1)
- Protective earth conductor impedance of the circuit (R2)
Assume:
- Ze = 0.35 ohm (measured or provided by supply authority)
- Circuit: 30 m of 4 mm2 Cu/PVC twin + earth cable
- Phase conductor resistance R1 = 4.61 mohm/m x 30 = 0.138 ohm (at 20 degC)
- Earth conductor resistance R2 = 7.41 mohm/m x 30 = 0.222 ohm (at 20 degC, 2.5 mm2 CPC)
Temperature Correction
The resistance values above are at 20 degC. Under fault conditions, the conductors heat up. BS 7671 applies a factor of approximately 1.2 to account for conductor temperature rise during the fault. IEC 60364 uses a similar approach. Always apply the temperature correction — measured values at 20 degC will be optimistically low.
Earth Fault Loop Impedance
Zs = Ze + (R1 + R2) x correction factor Zs = 0.35 + (0.138 + 0.222) x 1.20 Zs = 0.35 + 0.432 Zs = 0.782 ohm
Step 3: Verify Compliance
Zs = 0.782 ohm. The maximum permitted Zs for a 32 A Type C MCB at 0.4 s is 0.72 ohm.
0.782 > 0.72 — FAIL
The circuit does not meet the disconnection time requirement. The earth fault loop impedance is too high.
Step 4: Solutions
Three options to resolve this:
-
Increase the CPC size: Use 4 mm2 CPC instead of 2.5 mm2. R2 becomes 4.61 x 30 = 0.138 ohm. Zs = 0.35 + (0.138 + 0.138) x 1.20 = 0.35 + 0.331 = 0.681 ohm. This is less than 0.72 ohm — PASS.
-
Add an RCD: A 30 mA RCD operates at fault currents as low as 30 mA and disconnects within 40 ms (0.04 s) at 5x rated residual current (150 mA). This provides 0.4 s disconnection regardless of the loop impedance (up to approximately 7,667 ohm for a 30 mA RCD at 230 V). RCD protection supplements, but does not replace, the overcurrent protection requirement.
-
Reduce the circuit length: If 25 m instead of 30 m, R1 = 0.115 ohm, R2 = 0.185 ohm. Zs = 0.35 + 0.360 = 0.710 ohm — just within the 0.72 ohm limit. Marginal, but a pass.
Corrected Zs with Larger CPC
Zs = Ze + (R1 + R2) x 1.20 Zs = 0.35 + (0.138 + 0.138) x 1.20 Zs = 0.35 + 0.331 Zs = 0.681 ohm (less than 0.72 ohm limit) — PASS
TT System: The RCD Calculation
For a TT system, the earth fault loop impedance is much higher because it includes the earth electrode resistances. The calculation is:
TT System Disconnection Condition
R_A x I_delta_n less than or equal to 50 V
Where R_A is the sum of the resistance of the earth electrode and the protective conductor, and I_delta_n is the rated residual operating current of the RCD.
IEC 60364-4-41, Clause 411.5.3 — TT system — fault protectionFor a 30 mA RCD:
R_A must be less than or equal to 50 / 0.030 = 1,667 ohm
For a 100 mA RCD:
R_A must be less than or equal to 50 / 0.100 = 500 ohm
For a 300 mA RCD:
R_A must be less than or equal to 50 / 0.300 = 167 ohm
This is why 30 mA RCDs are almost universally used in TT systems — they allow earth electrode resistances up to 1,667 ohm, which covers virtually all practical earth electrode installations. A 300 mA RCD requires an earth electrode resistance below 167 ohm, which is achievable but requires careful electrode design and soil assessment.
IT Systems: The Third Option
For completeness: the IT system has no direct connection between the source and earth (the source is either isolated or connected through a high impedance). A single earth fault does not cause a dangerous touch voltage — the system continues operating. Only a second fault on a different phase creates a hazard.
IT systems are used in critical applications where continuity of supply is paramount: operating theatres, continuous process plants, and some mining applications. They require insulation monitoring devices (IMDs) to detect the first fault and alarm, so it can be repaired before a second fault occurs.
IEC 60364-4-41 Clause 411.6 covers IT system requirements. The calculation method differs significantly from TN and TT systems and is beyond the scope of this guide.
IEC 60364-4-41, Clause 411.6 — Fault protection — IT systemPractical Selection Advice
For most installations, the earthing system is determined by the supply utility — you get what they provide. In urban areas, this is usually TN-C-S. In rural areas, TT. For private substations (industrial installations with their own transformers), you choose the system.
When you have the choice:
- Use TN-S for any installation where reliability of earth fault protection is critical, EMC performance matters, or the environment is hazardous (mining, petrochemical, wet locations).
- Use TN-C-S for standard commercial and industrial installations where the supply utility provides a PME (Protective Multiple Earthing) supply and the installation is not in a hazardous area.
- Use TT when there is no metallic earth return path to the source, or when you specifically want to isolate the installation earth from the supply earth (rural installations, temporary installations, installations with sensitive equipment affected by supply neutral currents).
The earthing system is a design decision made early and changed with great difficulty later. Get it right at the beginning.
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Lead Electrical & Instrumentation Engineer
18+ years of experience in electrical engineering at large-scale mining operations. Specializing in power systems design, cable sizing, and protection coordination across BS 7671, IEC 60364, NEC, and AS/NZS standards.
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