a conductor with a sharp bend will cause a large
enough mechanical force. Therefore, a sufficiently
mechanical solid bond is required. Another
mechanical effect of a lightning strike is caused by a
sudden rise in air temperature to 30,000 K and
causing an explosive expansion of air around the
moving charge path. This effect is because if the
conductivity of an electric arc replaces the
conductivity of the metal, the energy generated will
increase hundreds of times, and this energy can cause
damage to the protected building structure.
e. Fire Effect Due to Direct Strike
There are two leading causes of flammable material
fires due to lightning strikes, firstly due to direct
strikes on flammable materials storage facilities.
These volatile materials may be directly affected by
the heating effect of the lightning strike or the path of
the lightning strike. Both secondary effects are the
cause of oil fires. It consists of confined charges,
electrostatic and electromagnetic pulses, and ground
currents.
f. Stuck Load Effects
The cloud storm induces this static charge as opposed
to other loading processes. Suppose the charge
neutralization process ends and the strike path is
neutral again. In that case, the trapped charge will be
left on objects isolated from direct electrical contact
with the earth and on non-conducting materials such
as combustible materials. Non-conducting materials
cannot transfer charge in a short time when there is a
path of strike.
2.3 Lightning Protection System
2.3.1 External LPS
External Lightning Protection System avoids the
direct danger of a lightning strike in installations,
equipment installed outside the building, in towers,
and exterior parts of the building. This type of
protection includes the protection of people outside
the building. The External Lightning Protection
System consists of:
2.3.2 Air Termination
Air termination is part of an external lightning
protection system devoted to capturing lightning
strikes in metal electrodes mounted vertically or
horizontally. Terminal air is an area or zone that is
specifically for capturing lightning at a certain radius.
Lightning arresters can catch all lightning strikes
without hitting the building, building, or protected
area (protection zone).
2.3.3 Lightning Current Conductor (Down
Conductor)
The down conductor distributes lightning current that
hits the air termination (air terminal) and is forwarded
to earth/grounding (Smith, 1998 and Mendez, 2014).
The choice of the number and position of the supply
conductors should consider the fact that, if the
lightning current is divided into several supply
conductors, the risk of side-stepping and
electromagnetic interference within the building
should be considered is reduced. Based on the 2014
SNI 7015 standard that each down conductor installed
on a down conductor is installed on the shortest
possible route and does not cause a side-flash hazard
to humans/equipment and induction hazards,
especially for sensitive equipment. Down conductors
in installations with sensitive equipment must be
equipped with a lightning strike monitoring device
and a current recording device. Designing the down
conductors with small resistance is essential to direct
the lightning current to the ground.
In the ATP/EMTP software, the down conductor
has a replacement circuit that is a component of
resistance and inductance. Down conductor models
are generally modeled in terms of resistance and
inductance connected in series. The magnitude of the
resistance value in the down conductor can be
calculated using the following equation. Meanwhile,
to calculate the radius of the conductor using equation
(1)
2.3.4 Earthing (Grounding)
Grounding is planting one/several electrodes into the
ground in a certain way to get the desired grounding
resistance (Zaini, 2016). The grounding electrode
makes direct contact with the earth. A non-insulated
earth conductor embedded in the earth is considered
part of the earth electrode.
2.3.5 Internal IDIC
Implementing the concept of an internal lightning rod
is an effort to avoid potential differences at all points
in installing protected equipment inside the building
(Smith, 1998; Moore, 1999; Jiang, 2013; Zaini, 2016;
Mendez, 2016).
The steps that can be taken are integrating
potential equalizer facilities, installing voltage and
current arrestors, shielding, and filters. The
investment costs required for the procurement of