The continuous current dissipation of direct current grounding electrodes generates intense Joule heat, causing severe soil moisture loss and localized thermal runaway. Traditional static models ignore the temperature-dependent nature of soil parameters, leading to dangerous underestimations of actual temperature rises and thermal risks. To address this critical issue, this study establishes a bidirectional dynamic electro-thermal coupled model for a vertical grounding electrode using COMSOL Multiphysics. Comparative analysis demonstrates that the dynamic model accurately reproduces the late-stage accelerated temperature rise observed in experiments, proving its necessity over static methods. Simulations reveal that increased soil resistivity governs heat generation and directly causes a dramatic surge in both grounding resistance and maximum step voltage. In two-layer heterogeneous soils, current is forced into lower-resistivity regions, triggering extreme localized overheating. To mitigate this, expanding the cross-sectional radius of the coke bed effectively suppresses the thermal concentration. These findings provide quantitative evidence and non-uniform design guidelines for the safe operation and thermal protection of grounding electrodes under complex geological conditions.
Deng et al. (Fri,) studied this question.