DocumentCode
109877
Title
Study on the Dielectric Characteristics of Gaseous, Liquid, and Solid Insulation Materials for a High Voltage Superconducting Apparatus
Author
Jonggi Hong ; Jeong Il Heo ; Seokho Nam ; Hyoungku Kang
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Korea Nat. Univ. of Transp., Chungju, South Korea
Volume
23
Issue
3
fYear
2013
fDate
Jun-13
Firstpage
7700604
Lastpage
7700604
Abstract
A study on the dielectric characteristics of various cryogenic materials should be conducted to design an electrically reliable high-voltage superconducting apparatus. Especially, the dielectric characteristics of gaseous and solid insulation materials are important for designing current lead parts, and those of gaseous and solid insulation materials are indispensable for designing superconducting coil parts. A subcooled liquid nitrogen (LN2) cooling system is the most promising, with respect to insulation, thermal stability, and current capacity, in the development of a high-voltage superconducting apparatus. In this paper, dielectric experiments on gaseous nitrogen ( GN2), LN2, and glass fiber reinforced plastic are conducted under ac and lightning impulse voltage for various pressures. Sphere-to-plane electrode systems are used to examine the dielectric characteristics of insulation materials according to field utilization factor (ξ). The experimental results are analyzed by a finite element method. The empirical formulae for calculating the electrical breakdown voltages of various cryogenic insulation materials at sparkover are presented.
Keywords
cooling; cryogenics; electric breakdown; finite element analysis; superconducting coils; ac impulse voltage; cryogenic insulation materials; current capacity; dielectric characteristics; electrical breakdown voltages; electrically reliable high-voltage superconducting apparatus; empirical formulae; field utilization factor; finite element method; gaseous insulation material; gaseous nitrogen; glass fiber reinforced plastic; high-voltage superconducting apparatus development; lightning impulse voltage; liquid insulation material; solid insulation material; sparkover; sphere-to-plane electrode systems; subcooled liquid nitrogen cooling system; superconducting coil; thermal stability; Breakdown voltage; Dielectrics; Electric fields; Electrodes; Insulation; Lightning; Materials; Gaseous insulation; high voltage superconducting apparatus; liquid insulation; solid insulation;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1051-8223
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TASC.2012.2236875
Filename
6399561
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