Typical Values of Soil Resistivity

For earthing and grounding systems design
Soil resistivity measurements using Wenner method 1 scaled - Typical Values of Soil Resistivity

Why is accurate soil resistivity data important?

The soil electrical resistivity (soil resistivity) is one of the most important factors and has a significant impact on touch and step voltages which occur during a fault on an earthing/grounding system.

If you intend to perform modelling of an earthing system or safety measurements your design or your assessment will only be as accurate as the soil resistivity data.

Soil resistivity variance

Resistivity varies from less than 1 Ω.m for sea water up to 109 Ω.m for sandstone.

Resistivity varies not only with the type of soil but also with temperature, moisture, mineral content, and compactness. Therefore, resistivity should be measured in the field at the actual site of the installation and the conditions under which it was measured must also be recorded.

When to use typical soil resistivity values

There are a number of reasons depending on the stage of your project.

  1. For preliminary earthing system designs.

Your project which is at tender stage involves a significant earthing component (such as a substation) and actual soil resistivity meausurements have not been performed. In order to estimate the costs of an earthing system you will need to estimate soil resistivity.

  1. To validate your soil resistivity measurements.

If you already have soil resistivity measurements and you want to validate them based on your geotechnical knowledge of the local soil and the conditions.

Typical soil resistivity values

Tables 1-3 provide typical soil resistivity values based on soil types. To use these values for your project you should refer to the geotechnical report or if it is not available then find out the types of soils which are present for the region of your project (there are geological maps available).

In addition Table 4 provides the resistivity of typical surface layer materials used for substations.

Table 1. Range of earth resistivity [ref. 1]

Type of earth Average resistivity(Ω-m)
Wet organic soil
10
Moist soil
100
Dry soil
1000
Bedrock
10,000

Table 2 – Range of soil resistivity [ref. 2]

Type of earth Average resistivity(Ωm)
Wet organic soil
10
Dry, humous soil
30
Moist soil
100
Limesttone shale
300
Moraine sandstone
1000
Coarse sand, gravel
3000
Bedrock
10,000

Table 3. Geological period and formation [ref. 3]

Earth resistivity ohm-meters Quarternary Cretaceous tertiary quarternary Carboniferous triassic Carbrain Ordovician devonian Precambrian and combination with Carbrain
1 Sea water
10 Unusually low
Loam
Clay
Chalk
30 Very low
Chalk
Trap Diabase
Limestone
Sandstone
100 Low
300 Medium
Shale
Limestone
Sandstone
Dolomite
1000 High
3000 Very High
Sandstone
Quartzite
Slate
Granite
Gneisses
10,000 Unusually high
Coarse sand and gravel in surface layers

Table 4. Resistivity of typical surface layer materials in substations

Material Electrical resistivity (Ω.m)
Concrete (wet)
50 – 100
Concrete (dry)
2000 – 10,000
Crushed rock for surface coverings (wet)
3000
Asphalt (wet)
10,000

Table 5. Resistivity values for various materials [ref. 4]

Material Resistivity
Ωm
Typical
Usual limits
Salt sea water
0.2
0.15 to0.25
Estuarine water
0.5
0.2 to 5
Artesian water
4
2 to 12
Damp black inland soil a
8
5 to 100
Damp clay
10
2 to 12
Inland lake water, reservoirs
20
10 to 500
River banks, alluvium
25
10 to 100
Clay/sand mixtureb
30
20 to 200
River water(upstream)
40
30 to 200
Concretec
100
40 to 1 000
Dry inland soila
100
20 to 1 000
Moraine gravel
2 000
1 000 to 10 000
Coal
2 000
1 000 to 5 000
Secondary rock
3 000
1000 to 50 000
Sandb
3 000
1 000 to 10 000
Solid volcanic rockd
20 000
10 000 to 50 000
Icee
100 000
10 000 to 100 000
a. Black soil is a non-specific term applicable to large areas of Queensland and New South Wales. The soil is characterized by a high level of dissolved salts and undergoes considerable contraction on drying out, therefore causing a significant increase in resistivity when dry.

b. Resistivity values for a clay/sand mixture and for sand are based on measurements from several sites in Queensland. The resistivity of dry sand is intrinsically very high and it will serve to increase the resistivity of any material in which it may be interspersed.

c. Values of resistivity for concrete apply to the cast material and do not include the effect of any reinforcing bars. The values given will assist in determining the discharge resistance from steel reinforcement to the general body of earth.

d. Solid volcanic rock is often subject to fissures and faults, the contents of which substantially reduce the resistivity, though not to a very satisfactory level for earth electrode performance for lightning protection.

References:

[1] IEEE Std 80 – IEEE Suide for Safety in AC Substation Grounding

[2] CIGRE TB 95 Guide on the Influence of High Voltage Systems on Metallic Pipelines

[3] IEEE Std 81:2012 – IEEE Guide for Measuring Earth Resistivity, Ground Impedance, and Earth Surface Potentials of a Grounding System

[4] AS/NZS 1768-2021 – Lightning Protection

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