DocumentCode :
1592317
Title :
Gas breakdown in the sub-nanosecond regime with voltages below 15 kV
Author :
Krompholz, H. ; Hatfield, L.L. ; Kristiansen, M. ; Hemmert, D. ; Short, B. ; Mankowski, J. ; Brown, M. ; Altgilbers, L.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Phys., Texas Tech. Univ., Lubbock, TX, USA
Volume :
1
fYear :
2001
Firstpage :
487
Abstract :
Gaseous breakdown in the sub-nanosecond regime is of interest for fast pulsed power switching, short pulse electromagnetics and for plasma limiters to protect devices from high power microwave radiation. Previous investigations of sub-nanosecond breakdown were mainly limited to high-pressure gases or liquids, with applied voltages in excess of 100 kV. In this paper, the authors investigate possibilities to achieve sub-nanosecond breakdown at applied voltages below 7.5 kV in point-plane geometries. The setup consists of a pulser (risetime between 400 ps to 1 ns), 50-/spl Omega/ transmission line, axial needle-plane gap with outer coaxial conductor, and a 50-/spl Omega/ load line. The needle consists of tungsten and has a radius of curvature below 0.5 /spl mu/m. The constant system impedance of 50 /spl Omega/ (except in the vicinity of the gap) and a special transmission-line-type current sensors enables current and voltage measurements with a dynamic range covering several orders of magnitude, with temporal resolution down to 80 ps. For pulse amplitudes of 1.7 kV (which are doubled at the open gap before breakdown) delay times between start of the pulse and start of a measurable current flow (amplitude > several milliamperes) have a minimum of about 8 ns, at a pressure of 50 torr in argon. Voltages of 7.5 kV produce breakdowns with a delay of about 1 ns. With negative pulses applied to the tip, at an amplitude of 7.5 kV, breakdown is always observed during the rising part of the pulse, with breakdown delay times below 800 ps, at pressures between 1 and 100 torr. At lower pressure, a longer delay time (8 ns at 50 mtorr) is observed. They authors expect the breakdown mechanism to be dominated by electron field emission, but still influenced by gaseous amplification.
Keywords :
electric breakdown; electric current measurement; electric sensing devices; electrodes; pulsed power supplies; pulsed power switches; 1 to 100 torr; 1.7 kV; 400 ps to 1 ns; 50 mtorr; 50 ohm; 50 torr; 7.5 kV; 8 ns; axial needle-plane gap; breakdown mechanism; electron field emission; fast pulsed power switching; gaseous amplification; high power microwave radiation; plasma limiters; short pulse electromagnetics; sub-nanosecond gaseous breakdown regime; transmission line; transmission-line-type current sensors; Breakdown voltage; Delay; Electric breakdown; Electromagnetic devices; Electromagnetic radiation; Gases; Microwave devices; Plasma devices; Protection; Pulse measurements;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Pulsed Power Plasma Science, 2001. PPPS-2001. Digest of Technical Papers
Conference_Location :
Las Vegas, NV, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7120-8
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/PPPS.2001.1002139
Filename :
1002139
Link To Document :
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