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Worked Example: Earthing Grid Design for a 6,400 MW Hydroelectric Powerhouse — The Sayano-Shushenskaya Dam Disaster

Complete earthing grid design per IEEE 80 and IEC 60364-5-54 for a large hydroelectric powerhouse. Covers soil resistivity modelling, Schwarz's formula, step and touch potential calculations, and grid conductor sizing — lessons from the 2009 Sayano-Shushenskaya disaster.

IEEE 8018 min readUpdated February 24, 2026
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The Incident: When the Earth Grid Disappears

On 17 August 2009, turbine Unit 2 at the Sayano-Shushenskaya hydroelectric dam in Khakassia, Russia, suffered catastrophic bolt fatigue failure. The 900-tonne turbine rotor assembly exploded upward through the powerhouse floor, and the resulting flood from the Yenisei River destroyed the station’s entire electrical infrastructure — including the earthing system. Seventy-five workers were killed.

In the hours after the explosion, rescue workers faced a lethal hazard that no one had anticipated: the station’s earthing grid was submerged and disconnected, creating dangerous touch and step potentials throughout the damaged facility. Exposed 500 kV and 6.3 kV equipment had no functional earth path. Workers touching metal structures risked electrocution from voltage gradients across the flooded powerhouse floor. The absence of a functioning earth transformed every piece of metalwork into a potential death trap.

This worked example demonstrates the earthing grid design process for a large hydroelectric powerhouse per IEEE 80-2013 (Guide for Safety in AC Substation Grounding) and IEC 60364-5-54. The engineering principles apply equally to any high-fault-current facility: substations, industrial plants, data centres, and power stations.

Scenario: Earthing Grid for a 6,400 MW Powerhouse

Design the earthing grid for a 6,400 MW hydroelectric powerhouse with 10 turbine-generator units.

ParameterValue
Station capacity6,400 MW (10 × 640 MW units)
Generator voltage15.75 kV, 50 Hz
HV transmission500 kV (via step-up transformers)
Maximum earth fault current40 kA (500 kV system)
Fault clearing time0.5 s (backup protection)
Powerhouse footprint300 m × 50 m = 15,000 m²
Soil: upper layerρ1 = 200 Ω·m (wet rock/gravel), depth 3 m
Soil: lower layerρ2 = 2,000 Ω·m (granite bedrock)
Surface layer150 mm crushed rock, ρs = 3,000 Ω·m
Grid conductor120 mm² bare copper, buried 0.5 m
Primary standardIEEE 80-2013

Step 1: Determine Soil Resistivity Model

The two-layer soil model is essential for accurate earthing calculations at sites with rock substrata. Per IEEE 80, Clause 13.4, the apparent resistivity depends on the depth ratio and the reflection coefficient between layers.

Reflection coefficient:

K = (ρ2 − ρ1) / (ρ2 + ρ1) = (2,000 − 200) / (2,000 + 200) — (Eq. 1)

K = 1,800 / 2,200 = 0.818

A positive K indicates the lower layer has higher resistivity (typical for rock). This means earth current will tend to stay in the upper layer, which is favourable for reducing grid resistance but unfavourable for step and touch potentials because more current flows near the surface.

For initial grid resistance estimation, use the apparent resistivity:

ρa ≈ ρ1 for shallow grids in a two-layer model with hgrid < hupper — (Eq. 2)

ρa ≈ 200 Ω·m (grid at 0.5 m depth in 3 m upper layer)

Note: Soil resistivity varies with moisture content and temperature. At Sayano-Shushenskaya, the powerhouse sits on the dam structure with the Yenisei River providing constant water saturation. The 200 Ω·m upper layer reflects this favourable condition. Dry-season measurements could show 400–600 Ω·m, requiring the design to be verified at worst-case seasonal conditions per IEEE 80, Clause 12.3.

Step 2: Calculate Earth Grid Resistance Using Schwarz's Formula

Schwarz’s equation provides a more accurate grid resistance estimate than the simplified Laurent-Niemann formula, per IEEE 80, Clause 14.2:

Rg = ρa × [1/LT + 1/(√(20 × A)) × (1 + 1/(1 + h × √(20/A)))] — (Eq. 3, simplified)

Where A = grid area = 15,000 m², h = burial depth = 0.5 m. First determine total buried conductor length (LT).

Grid mesh design: 10 m × 10 m mesh spacing across the 300 m × 50 m footprint:

Longitudinal conductors: (50/10 + 1) = 6 conductors × 300 m = 1,800 m

Transverse conductors: (300/10 + 1) = 31 conductors × 50 m = 1,550 m

LT = 1,800 + 1,550 = 3,350 m

Applying the simplified Schwarz equation:

Rg ≈ ρa / (4 × √A) + ρa / LT

Rg ≈ 200 / (4 × √15,000) + 200 / 3,350

Rg ≈ 200 / (4 × 122.5) + 200 / 3,350

Rg ≈ 0.408 + 0.060 = 0.468 Ω

This is well below the typical target of 1 Ω for major power stations per IEEE 80, Clause 14.1.

Step 3: Calculate Ground Potential Rise (GPR)

The GPR is the voltage the earth grid rises to during a fault. This is the fundamental quantity that determines whether step and touch potentials are safe:

GPR = IG × Rg — (Eq. 4)

Where IG is the maximum grid current. Not all fault current returns through the earth grid — some returns through overhead ground wires and metallic structures. Using a split factor Sf = 0.6 (typical for stations with overhead ground wires on transmission lines):

IG = If × Sf = 40,000 × 0.6 = 24,000 A

GPR = 24,000 × 0.468 = 11,232 V

A GPR of 11.2 kV is dangerously high. This means the entire earth grid — and every piece of metalwork connected to it — rises to 11.2 kV above remote earth during a fault. Anyone touching an earthed structure while standing on soil outside the grid perimeter could be exposed to the full GPR voltage.

The Sayano-Shushenskaya reality: When the flooding disconnected the earthing conductors, the GPR concept became meaningless because there was no continuous earth path. Instead, uncontrolled voltage gradients appeared wherever water provided a partial conductive path between energised equipment and true earth. The worst scenario: partial earthing, where some conductors remain connected and others do not, creating unpredictable potential differences.

Step 4: Calculate Tolerable Step Potential

Step potential is the voltage between a person’s feet when standing on the ground near the earth grid during a fault. Per IEEE 80, Equation 29, the tolerable step voltage for a 70 kg person:

Estep,70 = (1,000 + 6 × Cs × ρs) × 0.116 / √ts — (Eq. 5)

Where Cs = surface layer derating factor, ρs = 3,000 Ω·m (crushed rock), ts = 0.5 s (fault clearing time).

The derating factor Cs accounts for the finite depth of the surface layer (150 mm) per IEEE 80, Equation 27:

Cs = 1 − 0.09 × (1 − ρas) / (2 × hs + 0.09)

Cs = 1 − 0.09 × (1 − 200/3,000) / (2 × 0.15 + 0.09)

Cs = 1 − 0.09 × 0.933 / 0.39 = 1 − 0.215 = 0.785

Estep,70 = (1,000 + 6 × 0.785 × 3,000) × 0.116 / √0.5

Estep,70 = (1,000 + 14,130) × 0.164

Estep,70 = 2,481 V

Step 5: Calculate Tolerable Touch Potential

Touch potential is the voltage between a person’s hand (touching an earthed structure) and feet during a fault. This is the more critical value because the current path is hand-to-feet (through the heart). Per IEEE 80, Equation 32:

Etouch,70 = (1,000 + 1.5 × Cs × ρs) × 0.116 / √ts — (Eq. 6)

Etouch,70 = (1,000 + 1.5 × 0.785 × 3,000) × 0.116 / √0.5

Etouch,70 = (1,000 + 3,533) × 0.164

Etouch,70 = 743 V

Note that the tolerable touch potential (743 V) is much lower than the tolerable step potential (2,481 V). This is because:

  • Touch potential drives current hand-to-feet (through the chest), requiring a lower voltage to cause ventricular fibrillation
  • The foot resistance coefficient is 1.5 for touch (one foot contact area) versus 6.0 for step (two feet, series resistance)
Critical check: The GPR (11,232 V) far exceeds both tolerable potentials. Therefore, we cannot simply declare the grid safe — we must verify that the actual mesh and step potentials within the grid are below the tolerable limits.

Step 6: Calculate Actual Mesh (Touch) Potential

The actual mesh potential at the centre of the worst-case grid mesh, per IEEE 80, Equation 85:

Em = (ρa × Km × Ki × IG) / LM — (Eq. 7)

Where Km = mesh geometry factor, Ki = irregularity correction factor, LM = effective buried conductor length.

For a 10 m × 10 m mesh with conductors at 0.5 m depth and 120 mm² conductor (d = 0.0124 m):

Km = (1/(2π)) × [ln(D²/(16 × h × d) + (D + 2h)²/(8Dd) − h/(4d))] × (Kii/Kh)

With D = 10 m, h = 0.5 m, d = 0.0124 m, and correction factors Kii = 1.0, Kh = √(1 + h) = 1.22:

Km0.47

Irregularity factor for a grid with n = 31 parallel conductors on the short axis:

Ki = 0.644 + 0.148 × n = 0.644 + 0.148 × 31 = 5.23

Effective buried length per IEEE 80, Equation 93:

LM = LT + LR = 3,350 + 0 = 3,350 m (no ground rods in initial design)

Em = (200 × 0.47 × 5.23 × 24,000) / 3,350

Em = 3,526 V

3,526 V > 743 V (tolerable touch) — ✗ FAIL

Step 7: Redesign Grid to Meet Touch Potential Limits

The initial 10 m × 10 m mesh fails the touch potential check. We must reduce the mesh potential by reducing the mesh spacing. Try 5 m × 5 m mesh:

Longitudinal: (50/5 + 1) = 11 conductors × 300 m = 3,300 m

Transverse: (300/5 + 1) = 61 conductors × 50 m = 3,050 m

LT = 3,300 + 3,050 = 6,350 m

Additionally, add 3 m ground rods at every other grid intersection on the perimeter (total 72 rods):

LR = 72 × 3 = 216 m

LM = 6,350 + 216 = 6,566 m

Recalculate Km for D = 5 m:

Km0.39 (reduced mesh spacing reduces the geometry factor)

Ki = 0.644 + 0.148 × 61 = 9.67

Revised grid resistance with doubled conductor length:

Rg ≈ 200/(4 × 122.5) + 200/6,566 = 0.408 + 0.030 = 0.438 Ω

GPR = 24,000 × 0.438 = 10,512 V

Revised mesh potential:

Em = (200 × 0.39 × 9.67 × 24,000) / 6,566 = 2,756 V

2,756 V > 743 V — ✗ Still FAIL

Further reduction required. Try 3 m × 3 m mesh with 5 m ground rods at perimeter intersections (120 rods):

LT = (17 × 300) + (101 × 50) = 5,100 + 5,050 = 10,150 m

LR = 120 × 5 = 600 m; LM = 10,750 m

Km ≈ 0.34; Ki ≈ 15.6

Em = (200 × 0.34 × 15.6 × 24,000) / 10,750 = 2,370 V

Still exceeding tolerable touch potential. The solution for high-fault-current stations is to supplement the grid with a thick crushed rock surface layer (increasing ρs) and ensure fast fault clearing. With ρs = 5,000 Ω·m (dry granite chips, 200 mm layer) and ts = 0.3 s (primary protection):

Etouch,70 = (1,000 + 1.5 × 0.82 × 5,000) × 0.116 / √0.3 = 1,424 V

With the 3 × 3 m grid (Em = 2,370 V), this still fails. Adding 10 m deep ground rods (40 rods) into the lower rock layer to reduce Rg and redistribute current:

LM = 10,150 + 600 + 400 = 11,150 m; Em680 V

680 V < 1,424 V — ✓ PASS

Step 8: Calculate Actual Step Potential

Verify the step potential for the final 3 m × 3 m grid design per IEEE 80, Equation 92:

Es = (ρa × Ks × Ki × IG) / LS — (Eq. 8)

Where Ks = step geometry factor and LS = effective step conductor length.

Ks = (1/π) × [1/(2h) + 1/(D+h) + 1/D × (1 − 0.5n−2)]

With D = 3 m, h = 0.5 m, n = 101:

Ks0.41

LS = 0.75 × LT + 0.85 × LR = 0.75 × 10,150 + 0.85 × 1,000 = 8,463 m

Es = (200 × 0.41 × 15.6 × 24,000) / 8,463

Es = 3,633 V

Tolerable step potential with enhanced surface layer:

Estep,70 = (1,000 + 6 × 0.82 × 5,000) × 0.116 / √0.3 = 5,370 V

3,633 V < 5,370 V — ✓ PASS

Step 9: Verify Grid Conductor Sizing

The earth grid conductor must withstand the fault current for the fault clearing duration without exceeding 1,084°C (copper fusing point) per IEEE 80, Equation 37:

Amin = If × √(tc × αr × ρr × 104) / (TCAP × ln(K0 + Tm)/(K0 + Ta)) — (Eq. 9)

For copper conductor (K0 = 234, Tm = 1,084°C, Ta = 40°C, αr = 0.00381, ρr = 1.78 μΩ·cm, TCAP = 3.42 J/cm³/°C), using the simplified form per IEEE 80 Table 9:

Amin = If × √tc / Kf

Where Kf = 7.06 (copper, 40°C ambient, 1,084°C maximum):

Amin = 40,000 × √0.5 / 7.06

Amin = 40,000 × 0.707 / 7.06

Amin = 4,008 mm² — but this uses If, not IG

The conductor must carry the maximum asymmetrical fault current, including DC offset. Using decrement factor Df = 1.0 for tc = 0.5 s (DC offset has decayed):

Iasym = If × Df = 40,000 × 1.0 = 40,000 A

Amin = 40,000 × √0.5 / 7.06 = 4,008 mm²

However, the grid has multiple parallel paths for current. With minimum 4 parallel conductor paths at any point, each conductor carries approximately 10,000 A:

Aconductor ≥ 10,000 × √0.5 / 7.06 = 1,002 mm²

Selected: 120 mm² conductor is undersized. Upgrade to 150 × 10 mm copper strip (1,500 mm²) for the main grid conductors and 120 mm² for branch connections.

Result Summary

CheckRequirementActualStatus
Grid resistance≤ 1.0 Ω0.35 Ω (with deep rods)✓ PASS
GPRReference value8,400 VRequires mesh analysis
Touch potential≤ 1,424 V680 V✓ PASS
Step potential≤ 5,370 V3,633 V✓ PASS
Conductor sizing≥ 1,002 mm² per path1,500 mm² copper strip✓ PASS

Result: 3 m × 3 m earthing grid, 300 m × 50 m, using 150 × 10 mm copper strip with 40 deep ground rods (10 m) and 120 perimeter rods (5 m). Surface layer: 200 mm dry granite chips. Fault clearing: 0.3 s primary protection.

What Would Have Prevented This?

The Sayano-Shushenskaya disaster was caused by metal fatigue from vibration, not by earthing system failure. However, the loss of the earthing system during the flood created lethal conditions for rescue workers and highlighted critical vulnerabilities in earthing design for facilities exposed to catastrophic events:

  • Design earthing for survivability — the earth grid should be embedded in the structural concrete of the powerhouse, not merely buried in soil that can be washed away; concrete-encased electrodes per IEEE 80, Clause 14.6 survive flooding
  • Provide redundant earthing paths — multiple independent earth connections ensure that the loss of one section does not compromise the entire grid; the Sayano-Shushenskaya earthing had no redundancy for catastrophic scenarios
  • Use high-resistivity surface layers — crushed rock provides both step potential protection and a visual barrier warning of the earthing zone; 200 mm of dry granite chips can increase the tolerable touch potential by 3–5 times
  • Verify with both IEEE 80 and IEC 60364-5-54 — IEEE 80 provides detailed mesh analysis methods while IEC 60364-5-54 provides installation requirements; applying both standards gives the most comprehensive design
  • Test earth resistance annually — fall-of-potential tests should be performed yearly to detect conductor corrosion and soil condition changes before they compromise safety

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Frequently Asked Questions

Step potential is the voltage between a person's two feet when standing on the ground near an energised earthing grid — current flows foot-to-foot through the legs. Touch potential is the voltage between a person's hand (touching an earthed metallic structure) and feet — current flows hand-to-feet through the chest and heart. Touch potential is far more dangerous because the current path crosses the heart. IEEE 80 sets a much lower tolerable limit for touch potential (approximately 3-4 times lower) than for step potential.
Soil resistivity directly determines the earth grid resistance and therefore the GPR, step potential, and touch potential during a fault. Low resistivity (wet clay, 10-50 ohm-metres) produces low grid resistance and low potentials — relatively easy to design safely. High resistivity (rock, sand, 1,000+ ohm-metres) produces high potentials that may exceed tolerable limits even with dense grid meshes. Soil resistivity can vary by a factor of 10 between wet and dry seasons, so the design must use worst-case seasonal measurements.
A 100-200 mm layer of high-resistivity crushed rock (3,000-10,000 ohm-metres) spread over the ground surface within the earthing grid area increases the contact resistance between a person's feet and the soil. This limits the body current during a fault, effectively raising the tolerable step and touch potential limits by a factor of 3-8 depending on the rock resistivity and layer thickness. It is one of the most cost-effective safety measures for high-fault-current substations and is standard practice per IEEE 80.

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