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I made a simple bulb-battery circuit and then I cut one of the wires and attached both ends to cemented floor, the bulb didn't glow, this means cemented floor is a poor conductor of electricity. Then how does earthing work ? This idea of activity came from when I got a shock being barefoot but got no shock from same source with slippers on.

So,
How can electrons pass through insulator like cemented floor during earthing ?

Vishnu
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    For comparison with your situation, in the US a household earth connection is typically made with an 8' length (2 m?) of ~15 mm diameter copper rod driven vertically into the ground. This gives a lot more contact area between the building circuits and the earth than just touching a couple of wire ends to the surface of the ground. It also generally gets the contact down where the soil is wetter than it is on the surface. – The Photon Apr 08 '14 at 18:18
  • The bulb might require a few volts at 500mA (so perhaps a few ohms,) while your shocked body was being driven at 120v at perhaps 1mA (so perhaps many tens of kilohms.) If the concrete floor is a resistor, it could be way too high a resistance to light a bulb, yet way too low to prevent the shock. Dangerous experiment: connecting a neon bulb between AC hot conductor and a piece of foil laid on concrete. Since NE-2 will easily light up with less than 1mA, it's a better model for a human body experiencing an AC shock. – wbeaty Dec 05 '14 at 07:16
  • I believe your question has to do with with this seemingly newer idea that being barefoot on Earth allows the the Earth's electrical current to "pass through" the body, with the presumed effect of healing inflammation, which these practioners posit as a primary source of most suffering. Look here for some particular poor, though representative examples of these "research" papers: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4378297/ and https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3265077/ – Curious Layman Jun 17 '18 at 19:26

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Earthing something means dumping the electron flow into the earth. Since the earth is so big, it can absorbe/give a practically infinite amount of charge without changing potential, this means that you can treat earth as a reservoir of ready to use electrons.

If you plug the phase of your home power line into the ground (without safety devices in the middle), you are actually dumping the electrons in the earth. (In reality -since we use AC- you are repeatedly dumping and taking back electrons 50 times per second).

Note: the other wire of the power line that gets to your home is connected to earth at the nearest distribution node.

kornut
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    I know all that but I want to know that how do they pass through insulator like cemented floor ? – Mukul Kumar Apr 08 '14 at 17:34
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  • @MukulKumar: They don't. The reason the earth is conductive is because it contains a certain amount of water, and plenty of ions in that water.
  • – Mike Dunlavey Apr 08 '14 at 17:52
  • @MikeDunlavey, Your comment explains about the conductivity of Earth. If possible, could you comment on the conductivity of a cemented floor? Of course it must conduct and only because of that we receive electric shocks. But when we try to complete a circuit with a cement rod (without any metals), no current passes through it. I think conductivity of cement is less but not zero. Or resistance is too high but not infinite. But why does it have significant effect in one case but not in the other? I would be glad to hear your opinion on this. Thank you. – Vishnu Dec 15 '19 at 06:54
  • @M.GuruVishnu: I think you're right, but that's beyond what I know about materials. If you learn anything about conductivity of cement, please share it. Thanks. – Mike Dunlavey Dec 15 '19 at 23:43
  • Current does not pass through concrete, it goes through the earth wire towards an earth stake which is a thick metal rod that's buried like a foot in the actual, conductive earth. I guess theoretically you could make current part through the metal parts of rebar, but that's not really the point here. – htmlcoderexe Apr 01 '20 at 14:43