
1. Introduction
Power supply modules deployed in industrial plants are frequently exposed to electromagnetic disturbances originating from the external power grid. Lightning-induced surge transients are among the most severe, generating short-duration, high-energy impulses capable of damaging electronic power modules even without a direct strike. This document analyzes a Yokogawa PW482 failure attributed to a lightning event, the electrical signature of the fault, and best practices for surge mitigation.
2. Environmental and Electrical Background
During thunderstorms, lightning strikes transfer extremely large currents (commonly 10 kA–200 kA) into the ground. Even indirect lightning strikes can couple transient voltages into nearby power and signal lines through:
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Inductive coupling (magnetic field)
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Capacitive coupling (electric field)
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Resistive/ground potential rise
Measured surge characteristics based on IEC 61000-4-5 models:
| Parameter | Typical Range |
|---|---|
| Peak Voltage | 1 kV – 6 kV |
| Peak Current | 1 kA – 4.5 kA |
| Waveform | 1.2/50 μs (voltage), 8/20 μs (current) |
| Duration | < 100 μs |
Such impulse energy exceeds the design rating of most industrial SMPS front-end circuits unless protected.
3. Observed PW482 Failure Behavior
Post-event inspection of the affected Yokogawa PW482 showed the following physical and electrical symptoms:
3.1 External Symptoms
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No 24 VDC output at the power bus
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Status indicators completely off
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Cabinet surge arresters triggered (MOV discoloration noted externally)
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Circuit breakers upstream did not immediately trip
3.2 Internal Damage Indicators
After removal of the enclosure:
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Input MOV (Metal Oxide Varistor) showed fragmentation and carbonized residue
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EMI filter capacitors (X/Y types) displayed dielectric bulging
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Primary AC rectifier bridge shorted on two diodes
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Primary MOSFET gate driver IC failed open
Failure pattern corresponds to a fast transient overvoltage, not thermal overload or miswiring.
4. Surge Energy Propagation Mechanism
Lightning-induced surges enter equipment via multiple paths:
A. AC Power Line
The most common path. A 2–4 kV impulse easily bypasses basic EMI filtering.
B. Ground Potential Rise
When earth potential increases during a strike, neutral-ground differential spikes exceed insulation ratings.
C. Control / I/O Cabling
Long field wiring behaves as an antenna during lightning events, coupling induced currents into equipment.
For PW482, the primary conduction path was determined to be the AC mains input.
5. Repair Feasibility Assessment
Once surge energy reaches the MOSFET + PWM controller stage, repairs become unreliable due to:
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Dielectric stress on insulation barriers
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Carbon tracking on PCB traces
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Component avalanche breakdown
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Hidden microcracks in SMD packages
In this case, repair was categorized as Not Recommended under critical system criteria.
6. Replacement and Recovery Procedure
Site engineers restored operation using the following steps:
Recovery downtime was approximately 1.5 hours from removal to full system restore.
7. Surge Protection Recommendations for Future Events
7.1 Install Class I & Class II Surge Protective Devices (SPDs)
Based on IEC 61643 recommendations:
| SPD Class | Application |
|---|---|
| Class I | Lightning current (direct strike or near field) |
| Class II | Switching surge & grid impulses |
| Class III | Local device-level protection |
7.2 Cabinet-Level MOV and TVS Protection
Installing secondary MOV or TVS diodes at the PW482 input reduces stress dramatically.
7.3 Improve Grounding and Bonding
Key metrics:
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Ground resistance ≤ 1–5 Ω
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Ground conductor cross-section sized per IEC 60364
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Avoid ground loops on shielding
7.4 Shielded Field I/O Cabling
Use shield-drain wires bonded at a single point, not both ends.
7.5 UPS and Isolation Transformer Usage
Isolation transformers mitigate common-mode lightning impulses.
8. Conclusion
The Yokogawa PW482 is not inherently susceptible to failure; however, lightning-induced transients exceed the energy handling capability of its internal surge suppression components. Proper surge protection architecture—compliant grounding, SPDs, shielded wiring, and UPS isolation—significantly reduces equipment loss and operational downtime.
Lightning surge failures are highly destructive but entirely mitigatable with appropriate industrial EMC practices.
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