Grounding of hydrostatic level sensors

Hydrostatic level sensors (also referred to as submersible pressure transmitter) have become often installed in outdoor applications, primarily in the water and wastewater industries, where open bodies of water, deep wells or boreholes are monitored. Hope to ground is essential when installing hydrostatic level sensors, since no grounding or poor grounding can lead to destruction or harm to the level sensor.
Common failures from improper grounding
Hydrostatic level sensors in outdoor applications are connected via cables to the PLC or routed to local telemetric systems. These cables can become an antenna, conducting electromagnetic or aerial voltage spikes down the wires to the sensor, causing an overload in the electronics and thereby premature failure. The media that is measured may itself store energy just like a capacitor. This is caused by lightning strikes, electrical surges or simply static electricity. When there is not a sufficiently low impedance ground connection for the particular level sensor, this may cause voltage surges that flash through the electronics causing them to overload and burn out.
Even if the voltage difference is too low to cause an overload of the electronics, it could cause electrolytic action because of the difference in voltage potential. This electrolytic action causes the metal housing material of the hydrostatic level sensor to be ?eaten away? over long-term operation. Electrolytic corrosion pits will form in the material that may cause the diaphragm or housing to perforate, ultimately causing premature failure of the level sensor. This may be mistaken for chemical corrosion but is, actually, due to the difference in voltage potential between the sensor and the surrounding liquid. Without a good ground the sensor becomes a sacrificial anode and is inevitably eaten away.
How to properly ground and protect a hydrostatic level sensor
WIKA level sensors can be found with optionally integrated lightning protection that acts on dangerous differences in the voltage potential between electronics, cabling and transmitter body, and routes any harmful voltages to ground before they can damage the internal circuitry. However, if the grounding for the transducer is poor, it will still have nowhere else to go but into the electronics or body of the sensor, causing a premature failure.
In the case of metallic and plastic tanks, any isolated metal parts ought to be connected to a standard ground with an impedance of < 100 Ohms. In applications onboard ships, where, essentially metal tanks are always present, all of the different ground potentials ought to be linked to the ship?s main ground point during docking. In lakes and reservoirs, a low impedance connection to ground may be hard to achieve, but will be well worth the effort since it saves the hydrostatic level sensor electronics from failure. On artificial constructions or rock sites, even long copper spikes driven in to the ground may not give a low-enough impedance to ground, so earthing grids could be embedded in to the ground to achieve the right resistance to ground.
Grounding of hydrostatic level sensors is a basic requirement of the reliable operation of level sensors, especially in outdoor applications, where overvoltage spikes and surges because of lightning strikes can occur regularly. Failure to provide adequate grounding can lead to the failure of the level sensor.
Have Honest at the profiles of WIKAs submersible pressure transmitters LH-20 and LS-10.
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