DocumentCode
32324
Title
Breakdown strength and dielectric recovery in a high pressure supercritical nitrogen switch
Author
Zhang, J. ; van Heesch, E.J.M. ; Beckers, F.J.C.M. ; Pemen, A.J.M. ; Smeets, R.P.P. ; Namihira, T. ; Markosyan, A.H.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Eindhoven Univ. of Technol., Eindhoven, Netherlands
Volume
22
Issue
4
fYear
2015
fDate
Aug-15
Firstpage
1823
Lastpage
1832
Abstract
Fast and repetitive switching in high-power circuits is a challenging task where the ultimate solutions still have to be found. We proposed a new approach. Supercritical fluids (SCFs) combine favorable properties of liquids - insulation strength, thermal behavior, and gases - self healing, high fluidity, and absence of vapor bubbles. That´s why we start investigating the subject of plasma switches in SC media. First results indicate excellent switch recovery and very high insulation strength. We present the design of a SCF insulated switch (SC switch). Breakdown strength of the SCF is investigated and found to be high in comparison with most of the solid insulating media. The dielectric recovery inside the SC N2 switch is tested under a repetitive 30 kV, 200 ns pulse voltage at repetition rate up to 5 kHz. The recovery breakdown voltage across the SC switch achieves 80 % within 200 μs. The current interruption capability of SC N2 is investigated experimentally in a synthetic circuit generating a high-frequency arc of several hundreds of amperes and a transient recovery voltage of hundreds of volts. The results show that a SC N2 switch with fixed electrodes and an inter-electrode distance of mm range can successfully interrupt this current at approximately 2 ms after arc initiation.
Keywords
electric breakdown; insulation; pulsed power switches; SCF insulated switch; breakdown strength; dielectric recovery; fixed electrodes; high fluidity; high pressure supercritical nitrogen switch; high-power circuits; insulation strength; inter-electrode distance; pulsed power; repetitive switching; self healing; supercritical fluids; thermal behavior; transient recovery voltage; vapor bubbles absence; Dielectrics; Electric breakdown; Electrodes; Optical switches; Plasmas; Switching circuits; Pulsed power; arc; breakdown voltage; dielectric recovery; high pressure plasma; high-voltage switch; plasma; supercritical fluids;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Dielectrics and Electrical Insulation, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1070-9878
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TDEI.2015.005013
Filename
7179137
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