Solar PV Earthing and Bonding: Array Frame Earthing, DC Isolator Placement and Lightning Risk

Quick Answer: Under BS 7671 Section 712, the metalwork of the solar array (frames, mounting rails) must be earthed to the main earthing terminal of the installation. The DC cable circuit between panels and inverter must have a DC isolator accessible at the inverter and, for systems above certain voltage levels, at the array. Earth fault detection in the inverter monitors for insulation failure on the DC side. Lightning risk assessment (BS EN 62305) should be considered for exposed roof installations, though most domestic installations do not require a formal lightning protection system.

Summary

Solar PV DC circuits operate at elevated voltages (typically 200–600Vdc for domestic string systems) and present specific earthing and isolation requirements distinct from standard AC domestic wiring. BS 7671 Section 712 is the governing standard; it specifies requirements for DC cable types, earthing connections, fault detection, and isolation.

Understanding these requirements is essential for MCS-compliant installation and for maintaining the safety of the system for 25+ years. This article covers the key earthing and bonding requirements, DC isolation, and the lightning protection question.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table: DC Earthing and Isolation Requirements

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Requirement Detail Standard
Array frame earthing Metal frames/rails connected to installation PE BS 7671 S712
DC circuit Unearthed (floating) with earth fault monitoring in inverter BS 7671 S712
DC cable type Double-insulated, UV-resistant (H1Z2Z2-K or equivalent) BS 7671 S712
DC isolator (inverter side) Accessible at inverter; rated for DC; de-energises DC circuit BS 7671 S712
DC isolator (array side) At or near array for string voltage >120V (recommended) MCS/IET guidance
Insulation resistance >1MΩ on DC circuit (L+ to Earth, L- to Earth) BS EN 62446
String fuses Required where >2 strings in parallel BS 7671
Surge protection (SPD) Type 2 at inverter DC input; recommended for exposed sites IET GN7

Detailed Guidance

Array Frame Earthing

All metal components in the solar PV mounting system — aluminium rails, hooks, brackets, and panel frames — must be electrically connected to the protective earth (PE) of the installation.

Why: In the event of a fault where a DC conductor contact is made with the array metalwork (cable damage, insulation failure, panel defect), the fault current must have a path to earth to enable the inverter's earth fault protection to detect the fault and disconnect. Without earthing, the metalwork could become live at DC voltage and present a shock risk to anyone touching the array.

How:

Testing: At commissioning, test the continuity of the earth bond from the array metalwork to the main earth terminal. A low-resistance ohmmeter reading (<1Ω) confirms continuity.

DC Circuit: Why It Is Unearthed

In most domestic solar PV systems, the DC conductors (the positive and negative strings from the array to the inverter) are not connected to earth. This is the standard for grid-connected systems where the inverter includes an isolation transformer or galvanic isolation (transformerless inverters use software-based earth fault monitoring).

Earth fault detection in the inverter: The inverter continuously monitors the insulation resistance between the DC conductors and earth. If either the positive or negative conductor develops a path to earth (through cable damage, water ingress, or panel defect), the insulation resistance drops. When the insulation resistance drops below a threshold (typically 1MΩ), the inverter generates an error (ISO fault or insulation fault) and disconnects. This protects against fire risk and personnel shock.

Transformerless vs transformer-based inverters:

For most UK domestic installations, transformerless inverters with earth fault monitoring are standard. No connection of DC conductors to earth is required or appropriate.

DC Cable Requirements

DC wiring between panels and inverter must use:

Cable routing: DC cables on the roof must be routed in conduit or cable management that protects them from mechanical damage, UV exposure, and vermin access. Cables should not be draped loosely across roof surfaces. Where cables enter the building, they must pass through fireproof or sealed entry points (fire-stopping putty or sealed conduit glands).

Bundling: DC positive and negative cables from the same string should be routed together (clipped together or in the same conduit). This reduces the magnetic loop area of the circuit and minimises inductive effects from lightning-induced surges.

DC Isolation

At the inverter: A DC isolator (sometimes called the "array isolator" or "generator isolator") is fitted at the inverter, in the DC string circuit. This allows:

The isolator must be:

At the array: For strings with open-circuit voltage above 120V (virtually all modern domestic strings — a 3-panel string of modern panels already exceeds this), an isolator near the array is recommended by MCS guidance and IET Guidance Note 7. This allows first responders (fire brigade) to de-energise the DC circuit at the array level without going into the building.

Lightning Risk

Is a lightning protection system required? For most UK domestic solar PV installations, a formal lightning protection system (BS EN 62305) is not required. However, a risk assessment should be performed. The BS EN 62305 Part 2 risk assessment method considers:

For most suburban domestic properties in the UK (moderate ground flash density, ordinary building, existing structure), the risk assessment typically indicates that lightning protection is not required.

Where SPDs are recommended: Even where a formal lightning protection system is not required, surge protection devices (SPDs) on the DC input of the inverter are recommended for:

Type 2 SPDs (BS EN 61643-11) at the inverter DC input and AC output divert lightning-induced surge currents to earth before they reach the inverter electronics. Cost is approximately £50–£150 per SPD; recommended as standard for higher-risk sites.

Frequently Asked Questions

My inverter shows an "ISO fault" error. What does this mean?

An ISO fault (insulation fault) indicates that the inverter has detected a reduced insulation resistance between one of the DC conductors and earth. The most common causes are: water ingress into a DC connector (MC4 connectors on the roof can fail if not fully clicked together or if they are aged); a damaged panel junction box; DC cable damage; or a failing panel. Check all DC connectors on the roof for moisture or damage; test insulation resistance on each string separately to isolate the fault string.

Can I use standard grey armoured cable (SWA) for the DC circuit?

Standard SWA (steel wire armoured cable) is not rated for DC PV circuits and should not be used for DC string cabling. DC PV cable (H1Z2Z2-K) has the required double insulation, UV resistance, and temperature rating. Where mechanical protection is needed for the DC cable route on or off the roof, use stainless steel or plastic conduit over appropriate DC PV cable.

Does the earthing bond need to cover every panel frame, or just the rails?

The rails must be earthed. If the panel frames make reliable metal-to-metal contact with the rails (via mid-clamps and end-clamps with proper metal-to-metal contact), the panel frames are earthed through the rail. If any panel frame is isolated from the rail (e.g., by a non-conductive coating), it should be separately bonded. Check the mounting system's installation guide for bonding requirements.

Regulations & Standards