March 2004

University of Toronto

'Shocking' research points to ways to protect technology

Toronto's CN Tower acts as a lightning laboratory, teaching scientists how to protect delicate electronic equipment against high-voltage surges, says a new study.

Lightning data captured by measurement stations at the CN Tower point to the most effective procedures for protecting sensitive technology in tall buildings or on power lines routed through mountainous terrain. "More and more electronic equipment has very sensitive components," says study co-author Wasyl Janischewskyj, a professor emeritus at U of T's Edward S. Rogers Sr. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. "Even a small over-voltage can cause equipment to malfunction."

Lightning strikes the 553-metre-high CN Tower an average of 75 times per year. To direct the current into the ground, metallic conductors run down the tower and are connected to 42 grounding rods buried deep below the surface. Janischewskyj and his colleagues found that the unusual structure of the CN Tower � with its Skypod and observation deck � obstructs the downward flow of electricity and causes the current to peak in certain areas. Identifying such patterns is critical to designing protective measures, he says.

"This study gives us a better understanding of the electromagnetic field caused by a lightning strike to a tall structure," says Janischewskyj. "This can help designers incorporate the appropriate precautions, such as enclosures for sensitive equipment or special diodes that would 'short out' rather than cause an over-voltage inside the equipment."



The study, which was funded by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, appears in the March 3 online edition of the Journal of Electrostatics. CONTACT: Professor Emeritus Wasyl Janischewskyj, Edward S. Rogers Sr. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, 416-978-3116, [email protected] or Nicolle Wahl, U of T public affairs, 416-978-6974, [email protected]




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