Questions tagged [ground]

Ground or earth is the reference point in an electrical circuit from which other voltages are measured, or is a common return path for electric current, or a direct physical connection to the Earth.

SOURCE: wikipedia - Ground (Electricity)

Electrical circuits may be connected to ground (earth) for several reasons. In mains powered equipment, exposed metal parts are connected to ground to prevent contact with a dangerous voltage if electrical insulation fails. Connections to ground limit the build-up of static electricity when handling flammable products or when repairing electronic devices. In some telegraph and power transmission circuits, the earth itself can be used as one conductor of the circuit, saving the cost of installing a separate return conductor.

For measurement purposes, the Earth serves as a (reasonably) constant potential reference against which other potentials can be measured. An electrical ground system should have an appropriate current-carrying capability in order to serve as an adequate zero-voltage reference level. In electronic circuit theory, a "ground" is usually idealized as an infinite source or sink for charge, which can absorb an unlimited amount of current without changing its potential. Where a real ground connection has a significant resistance, the approximation of zero potential is no longer valid. Stray voltages or earth potential rise effects will occur, which may create noise in signals or if large enough will produce an electric shock hazard.

The use of the term ground (or earth) is so common in electrical and electronics applications that circuits in portable electronic devices such as cell phones and media players as well as circuits in vehicles such as ships, aircraft, and spacecraft may be spoken of as having a "ground" connection without any actual connection to the Earth. This is usually a large conductor attached to one side of the power supply (such as the "ground plane" on a printed circuit board) which serves as the common return path for current from many different components in the circuit.

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Should chassis ground be attached to digital ground?

I'm working on a PCB that has shielded RJ45 (ethernet), RS232, and USB connectors, and is powered by a 12V AC/DC brick power adapter (I do the 5V and 3.3V step down on board). The entire design is enclosed in a metal chassis. The shields of the…
cdwilson
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What is ground and what does it do?

I'm a bit confused about the concept of ground, and perhaps voltage as well, particularly when trying to analyze a circuit. When I learned about Ohm's law in grade school, I learned how to apply the law to calculate current, voltage, and resistance…
hedgepig
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Why is an Ethernet cable not grounded?

There is no dedicated GND in the classical Ethernet 8P8C ("RJ45") pinout.[1] Why does the Ethernet spec not include a ground, unlike many other cable types used for interconnecting devices that may both have its independent power source as well,…
mykhal
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When a battery is your power source, what is ground?

For the sake of not incorrectly connecting my power supply and damaging my board I'm going to ask a relatively dumb question. Is ground on my board the negative terminal on my battery? Explicitly should I connect the ground to the negative terminal…
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Why do we connect a battery to ground when jumping a car?

This may seem like a very simple question, but I've searched all over the place and haven't found an answer. When jumping a car, we connect the + end of the charged battery to the + end of the dead battery, and the - end of the charged battery to…
Ken Levinski
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What are the advantages of having two ground pours?

I've seen many 2-layer PCBs that have a ground pour on both the top and bottom layers, I was wondering why do that ? and wouldn't it be better to use the top layer for power and signals and the bottom layer for ground to simplify the routing and…
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Reason of multiple GND and VCC on an IC

What is the reason that most of ICs (e.g. MCU) has multiple (A/D)GND and (A)VCC pins? If it is to increase performance of an IC, how does it help to performance? or is it easier for the IC designer to connect some pins externally? some footprint…
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Help me understand the relationship between positive, negative, neutral and ground in AC and DC

This question stems from notations on schematics and seemingly conflicting information I'm seeing. I suspect that I'm seeing different vernacular for the same concepts--but I'm in a place where no one's ever told me that an "elevator" is a "lift".…
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Should I really divide the ground plane into analog and digital parts?

I am about to design my first PCB as part of my graduation project. Of course, as the first step, I try to learn as much as possible. A part of the research I found this 3 part article, that suggests that it is not neccessary and in some cases is…
Andrey Pro
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AC: Why differentiate between Ground and Neutral?

Current flows through a conductor connecting points at different potentials. Leaving aside multi-phase details, common/conventional AC systems use a 3-wire setup: Wire-1: a line/live/hot/phase wire presenting a point that oscillates between 2…
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"Ground" vs. "Earth" vs. common vs. negative terminal

This may just be me not having a degree in electrical engineering or electronics, but the whole notion of "ground" and "earth", when used in electrical circuit diagrams (especially integrated circuits), is extremely confusing. I guess the whole…
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What is causing large oscillations in my DC/DC boost converter? Is this ground bounce or some other effect?

I designed my first PCB for a DC-DC boost converter only to find that it produced very noisy output. The design is based around the MIC2253. Here's a schematic: Although my circuit allows for different combinations of input voltages (Vin) and…
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Why is earth used for ground? Literally earth?

I never considered earth to be particularly conductive. It's just dirt, after all. However, I've seen "earth ground" conductive stakes driven into the ground in order for electricity to be grounded, because it will find its way down there. However,…
user3916009
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Does anyone know the history of the earth ground symbol

I Googled for hours, asked every EE professor in my college, then checked every electrical engineering book in my university's library (hours), and have found nothing about the history of the ground symbol. Please point me if you can. Who coined…
Dave Sims
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Difference between Line and Neutral in AC

I want to find out what is the difference between the AC (220 VAC) lines, (phase and Neutral). As I know that the Alternating Current (AC) has no polarity, so why do we have a "phase" line and a "Neutral" line ?! Why one of them (the phase line)…
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