DocumentCode
1046490
Title
AC and DC testing for electrical insulation value of rubber gloves
Author
Balpinarli, M. ; Gela, G. ; Vaughan, T.A.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Ohio State Univ., Columbus, OH, USA
Volume
3
Issue
1
fYear
1988
fDate
1/1/1988 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
377
Lastpage
383
Abstract
The method developed for testing of the glove material consists of inserting samples (cut out from the glove) between energized electrodes. To prevent corona at electrode edges and flashover along the surface of the glove sample, the entire assembly (electrodes and samples) is immersed in an oil both. Oil-bath testing is particularly useful for numerous reasons: waterline corona, water turbulence, splashing, and their effects do not obscure the analysis; sections of the glove, such as the cuff area, that are not tested fully in the water tank, can be tested in the oil-bath vessel; many sections of the glove can be tested, providing data on the uniformity of glove material properties; one glove yields several samples for testing in the oil-bath vessel, significantly increasing the number of data points for statistical analysis; reject gloves (with local surface imperfections) at low unit cost can be used. It is shown that all tested samples have met the minimum withstand requirements for Class II gloves. Additional collected data suggest that aging of the rubber is not significant. The oil-bath vessel proved to be a reliable tool for statistical study of AC and DC breakdown characteristics of samples of rubber protective equipment, and extensions of the procedures to Class III and IV gloves is feasible
Keywords
insulating materials; insulation testing; rubber; AC breakdown characteristics; AC testing; Class II gloves; DC breakdown characteristics; DC testing; electrical insulation value; flashover; oil bath testing; rubber gloves; rubber protective equipment; splashing; water turbulence; waterline corona; Assembly; Corona; Dielectrics and electrical insulation; Electrodes; Flashover; Insulation testing; Materials testing; Petroleum; Rubber; Water;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Power Delivery, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0885-8977
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/61.4267
Filename
4267
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