학술논문

Thermal Effects of Lightning Currents in Metal Chains
Document Type
Conference
Source
2024 32nd Southern African Universities Power Engineering Conference (SAUPEC) Southern African Universities Power Engineering Conference (SAUPEC), 2024 32nd. :1-6 Jan, 2024
Subject
Power, Energy and Industry Applications
Robotics and Control Systems
Wires
Metals
Lightning
Mathematical models
Skin
Safety
Injuries
Arcing
lightning current
impulse
melting
exploding
metallization injury
Language
Abstract
This paper investigates the thermal effects of lightning currents on metal chains and answers whether wearing a metal chain necklace can save a person's life or potentially worsen their injuries. Equations are developed to model the final temperature of wires of several materials when subjected to lightning current. A wire-chain transformation factor is introduced to relate the thermal behavior of a wire to a chain, to extend the wire model to chains. The wire model has a maximum error of 7.8% when skin effects are considered. The experimental results found that chains exhibit arcing and exploding behavior, while wires melt. For the same material, thicker wires melt at a larger peak current than thin wires, while chains explode at a much lower current than wires melt, for the same material and gross diameter. This paper concludes that wearing a metal object might help channel a part of the current away from vital organs. Still, it does not guarantee complete safety and may potentially worsen burn-related injuries.