On the coupling influence of the relative position of human trunk with respect to the overhead high-voltage power line

Authors

  • Alexandru Salceanu Technical University of Iasi Faculty of Electrical Engineering http://orcid.org/0000-0001-5776-8772
  • Marius Valerian Paulet Technical University of Iasi Faculty of Electrical Engineering
  • Constantin Dan Neagu Technical University of Iasi Faculty of Electrical Engineering
  • Dragos Florin Bordeianu Technical University of Iasi Faculty of Electrical Engineering

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21014/acta_imeko.v9i3.790

Abstract

In this article, we present our study of the relevance of the relative position of the human torso with respect to the plane of the supporting pylons of various Overhead High-Voltage Power Lines from the perspective of currents induced by the generated magnetic fields. A homogenous model of the human body that considers the trunk as an elliptic cylinder has been developed in CST Studio software. Due to the necessary theoretical brevity, the results obtained by the simulation for the loop currents along the perimeters associated with the large (28 cm) and, respectively, the small (16 cm) axis of the elliptical cross-section of the trunk are presented and discussed. Simulations have been performed for five relative positions (0°, 30°, 45°, 60°, 90°) of the human trunk with respect to the plane of the transmission towers and for two types of symmetric, double three-phase networks (110 kV and 640 A, 220 kV and 960 A, respectively), with the normal supporting poles SN 110252. We present the solutions and the selected boundary conditions with the aim of using CST software in the domain of industrial frequency. The obtained results make it possible to formulate recommendations on the reduction of human exposure to magnetic fields.

Author Biographies

Alexandru Salceanu, Technical University of Iasi Faculty of Electrical Engineering

Electrical Measurements

Marius Valerian Paulet, Technical University of Iasi Faculty of Electrical Engineering

Electrical Measurements

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Published

2020-09-30

Issue

Section

Research Papers