Live-line working

A lineman wearing equipment for hot glove work

In electrical engineering, live-line working is the maintenance of electrical equipment, often operating at high voltage, while the equipment is energised. The first techniques for live-line working were developed in the early years of the 20th century, and both equipment and work methods were later refined to deal with increasingly higher voltages. In the 1960s, methods were developed in the laboratory to enable field workers to come into direct contact with high voltage lines. Such methods can be applied to enable safe work at the highest transmission voltages.

Background

Electrical hazards

Electricity is hazardous: an electric shock from a current as low as 35 milliamps is sufficient to cause fibrillation of the heart in vulnerable individuals.[1] Even a healthy individual is at risk of falling from a high structure due to loss of muscle control. Higher currents can cause respiratory failure and result in extensive and life-threatening burns.[1] The first recorded human fatality occurred in 1879 when a stage carpenter in Lyon, France touched a 250 volt wire.[2] The lack of any visible sign that a conductor is energised, even at high voltages, makes electricity a particular hazard.

At high voltages, it is unnecessary to come into direct contact with charged equipment to be shocked. An electric field surrounds all charged devices. Bringing a conducting object such as a human body into that field can intensify the field enough for electrical breakdown of the air and an arc to jump from the equipment to earth via that person. In the U.S., the Occupational Safety and Health Administration establishes clearance guidelines.[3] Solid materials such as rubber, while excellent insulators at low voltages, are also subject to electrical failure if subjected to a high enough field.

Avoiding loss of supply

Electricity utilities wish to avoid loss of supply, for which they receive customer complaints or are financially penalised. At the same time they are obligated to maintain and replace their electrical equipment on a regular basis. Due to the hazard of high voltage, it is normally necessary for equipment to be isolated from the supply before being worked upon, termed a planned outage.

In a radially-supplied system, a planned outage results in a loss of supply, unless equipment is connected in parallel, back up supplies are available or the grid is reswitched to transfer the electrical load elsewhere. An interconnected grid results in no loss of power, but security of supply is compromised, and out-of-merit generation may need to be ordered to maintain system security, which can be expensive.

Methods

In general, there are three methods of live-line working which help workers avoid the considerable hazards of live line working.[4] In various ways, they all serve to prevent current flowing from the live equipment through the worker.

Hot stick or Live Line Tool

Hot sticks are used in live line work by having the worker remain at a specified distance from the live parts and carry out the work by means of an insulating stick. Tools can be attached to the stick, allowing work to be performed with the worker himself safely away from the live conductors.

Insulating Gloves or Rubber Gloves

A live line worker is electrically protected by insulating gloves and other insulating equipment, and carries out the work in direct mechanical contact with live parts.

Barehand or Potential

The barehanded approach has a live line worker performing the work in direct electric contact with live parts. Before contact, the worker's body is raised to the same electric potential as the live parts, and then held there by electric connection, while maintaining suitable isolation from the surroundings which are at different potentials, like the ground, other people or trees. Because the worker and the work are at the same potential, no current flows through the worker.

Unearthed or De-energised

Some organizations additionally consider working on unearthed de-energised equipment to be another form of live-line working. This is because the line might become inadvertently charged (e.g. through a back-charged transformer, possibly as a result of an improperly connected, inadequately isolated emergency generator at a customer facility), or inductively coupled from an adjacent in-service line. To prevent this, the line is first grounded via a clamp known as a bond or drain earth. Once this is in place, further work is not considered to be live-line working.

Hot stick

Main article: Hot stick

Hot-stick working appeared in the second decade of the 20th century, when insulating poles made from baked wood were used for tasks such as replacing fuses, replacing post insulators, and transferring lines onto temporary supports.[4] The sticks enabled the linemen to carry out the work without infringing on the minimum clearance distances from live equipment. As experience with the techniques developed, then the operating voltages at which the work was performed increased. With the advent of fibreglass poles in the late 1950s, which neither split nor soaked up rainwater, utilities were prepared to carry out hot-stick working to their highest operating voltages, perhaps 765 kV.[4]

Tools, such as hooks or socket wrenches can be mounted at the end of the pole. More sophisticated poles can accept pneumatically or hydraulically driven power tools which allow, for example, bolts to be unscrewed remotely. A rotary wire brush allows a terminal to be scoured clean before a connection is made. However, a worker's dexterity is naturally reduced when operating tools at the end of a pole that is several metres long.[5]

Insulating glove or rubber glove working

Usually applied for work above 1kV ac 1.5kV dc The primary classes are: Class 1 - phase to phase working voltage 7.5kV Class 2 - phase to phase working voltage 17kV Class 3 - phase to phase working voltage 26.5kV Class 4 - phase to phase working voltage 36kV

Gloves protect the worker from exposure to the live part being worked upon sometimes referred to as the 1st point of contact; the point where current would enter the body should an inadvertent contact be made. Covers of insulating material such as blankets and linehose are employed in rubber glove working to protect the worker from exposure to a part at a different potential sometimes referred to as the 2nd point of contact; the point where current would leave the body should an inadvertent contact be made.

Bare hand

Bare-hand, or potential working involves placing the worker in direct electrical contact with an energized overhead line. The worker might work alongside the lines, from a platform that is suspended from them, or may sit or stand directly on the line itself.[5] In all cases, the worker's body is maintained at the same voltage as the line. It is imperative that the worker maintain appropriate and adequate limits of approach to any part at a different potential.

The first procedures for barehand working were developed in 1960 by Harold L. Rorden, a high-voltage engineer for American Electric Power.[4] Techniques were further refined following field and laboratory tests.

There are a number of ways in which the worker can access the live parts:

As the lineman approaches the wire, an arc will form between them as the worker is charged. This arc can be debilitating, and the worker must immediately bond himself electrically to the line to prevent further arcing.[5] A worker may use a conducting wand during the approach to first make the connection. Once on the line, the worker is safe from shock as both the lineman and the wire are at the same electric potential, and no current passes through his body. This is the same principle that allows birds to safely alight on power lines.[5]

When the work is completed, the process is reversed to remove the worker safely from the wire. Barehand working provides the lineman with greater dexterity than the hot stick method, and may be the preferred option if conditions permit it.[6] With this technique, insulator strings, conductor spacers and vibration dampers can be replaced, or lines spliced, without any loss of supply.[6]

The strong electric field surrounding charged equipment is enough to drive a current of approximately 15 μA for each kV·m−1 through a human body.[7] To prevent this, hot-hand workers are usually required to wear a Faraday suit. This is a set of overalls made from or woven throughout with conducting fibers. The suit is in effect a wearable Faraday cage, which equalizes the potential over the body, and ensures there is no through-tissue current.[8][9] Conducting gloves, even conducting socks, are also necessary,[10] leaving only the face uncovered.[5]

There is little practical upper voltage limit for hot-hand working, and it has been successfully performed at some of the highest transmission operating voltages in the world, such as the Russian 1150 kV system.[11]

Helicopter

A lineman wearing a Faraday suit can work on live, high-power lines by being transported to the lines in a helicopter. Wearing the suit, they can crawl down the wires.[12]

General precautions

Calculation of minimum approach distances take account of switching surges and other transients. Transmission systems are often fitted with coordinated protection devices called autoreclosers, which are circuit breakers that automatically attempt to remake a circuit after a fault. In the event that a fault did occur it would be most undesirable for the autorecloser to re-energise the circuit because the limits of approach would be greatly reduced and the workers position could be compromised. Hence for transmission work auto-reclosing equipment is rendered inoperative whilst live working takes place. Additional protection against unplanned overvoltage events (such as switching surges) can be provided by means of a surge diverter known as portable protective air gap.[4]

An electric arc is extremely bright, including in the ultraviolet, and can cause arc eye, a painful and potentially blinding condition. Workers may be provided with appropriately tinted goggles that protect their vision in the event of a flash, and provide defence against debris ejected by an arc.

Government regulations may regulate conditions for live working conditions.[5] For example, in United States, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration may require that more than one worker be present on site when working on live equipment above a specified voltage.[13] The work may be postponed if adverse weather conditions such as lightning or rainfall are anticipated.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Brauer, Roger L. (2006). Safety and Health for Engineers. Wiley-IEEE. pp. 163–165. ISBN 978-0-471-75092-5.
  2. Lee, R.C.; Rudall, D. (1992). "Injury Mechanisms And Therapeutic Advances In The Study Of Electrical Shock" (PDF). Proceedings of the Annual International Conference of the IEEE. 7: 2825–2827. doi:10.1109/iembs.1992.593814.
  3. "Working on Exposed Energized Parts". Regulations (Standards - 29 CFR). Occupational Safety and Health Administration. Retrieved 3 December 2008.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 "Live Work Guide for Substations" (PDF). EPRI. October 2004. Retrieved 8 December 2008.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Stix, Gary (September 1988). "Working hot: life at 765 kV" (PDF). IEEE Spectrum. 25 (9): 54 56. doi:10.1109/6.7169. ISSN 0018-9235.
  6. 1 2 Miller, R.H.; Malinowski, J.H. (1970). Power System Operation. McGraw-Hill Professional. pp. 178–180. ISBN 978-0-07-041977-3.
  7. Krawulski, Andrzej; Niejadlik, Tomasz (7–9 June 2006). "Live wire work on 400 kV and 220 kV OHL" (PDF). Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Live Maintenance. Prague: ICOLIM 2006.
  8. Bosonetto, Doriano; Iulita, Mario (7–9 June 2006). "The development of conductive suits: the Italian experience" (PDF). Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Live Maintenance. Prague: ICOLIM 2006.
  9. Davies, John (1988). Performance of Protective Clothing. ASTM International. pp. 813–832. ISBN 978-0-8031-1167-7.
  10. Electrical Times. 156. July 1969. p. 58.
  11. Krylov, S.V.; Timashova, L.V. "Experience of live-line maintenance on 500-1200 kV lines in Russia". Transmission and Distribution Construction and Live Line Maintenance: 359–368.
  12. Head, Elan (April 2015). "High-value cargo". Vertical Magazine. pp. 80–87. Retrieved 11 April 2015.
  13. "Electric Power Generation, Transmission, and Distribution". Regulations (Standards - 29 CFR). Occupational Safety and Health Administration. Retrieved 3 December 2008.
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