Title :
The response of MOV and SiC arresters to steep-front longer duration current pulses
Author :
Miller, David B. ; Fan, Hong Bo ; Barnes, Paul R.
Author_Institution :
Mississippi State Univ., MS, USA
fDate :
4/1/1991 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
An 80 m section of 138 kV transmission cable was used to produce pulses with voltages of several hundred kilovolts, currents greater than 20000 A, and voltage risetimes equal to approximately 50 ns. This line pulser was used to test the response of metal-oxide varistor (MOV) and gapped SiC surge arresters to steep-front, high-current, 1.4 μs-duration pulses. The typical arrester voltage during a pulse consists of a very strong initial overshoot voltage spike, followed by a nearly constant residual voltage which lasts to the end of the pulse. The overshoot voltage is believed to be related to the inductance of the arrester/divider circuit; this voltage increases linearly with peak current and is about the same for the MOV and SiC arresters. The residual voltage indicates the protection offered by the arrester due to its voltage clamping action and is larger for the SiC arrester. Replacing the arrester by a similarly sized aluminum tube allows the inductive portion of the response to be removed, and the true arrester response is then seen to be quite fast
Keywords :
silicon compounds; surge protection; testing; varistors; 138 kV; 20000 A; SiC arresters; divider circuit; inductance; line pulser; metal-oxide varistor; overshoot voltage spike; residual voltage; steep-front longer duration current pulses; surge arresters; transmission cable; voltage clamping; Aluminum; Arresters; Circuits; Clamps; Inductance; Silicon carbide; Surge protection; Testing; Varistors; Voltage;
Journal_Title :
Power Delivery, IEEE Transactions on