DocumentCode :
1317899
Title :
Spark breakdown in air at a positive point
Author :
Nasser, Essam
Author_Institution :
Iowa State University
Volume :
5
Issue :
11
fYear :
1968
Firstpage :
127
Lastpage :
134
Abstract :
When a voltage across an insulating gas is increased beyond a certain limit, the gas breaks down, becoming a conductor of electricity. A photographic method, the Lichtenberg figure technique, is used to study the process. Above a certain voltage an ionization wave, called a streamer, proceeds from the highly stressed electrode, branching out along the way and extending far into low-field regions. At elevated voltages the vigorous streamers reach the cathode with a high-potential front. Owing to the front, the short-lived local field at the cathode triggers electron emission, also producing negative streamers. The negative streamers greatly increase the density of the ionized particles in the channel, yielding what is known as a backstroke. For long air gaps, streamers are incapable of reaching the cathode; intensive secondary channels therefore develop at the anode and proceed toward the cathode. Either the backstroke or the secondary channel paves the way for the full ionization of the channel and spark breakdown.
Keywords :
Cathodes; Conductors; Dielectrics and electrical insulation; Electric breakdown; Electrodes; Electron emission; Gas insulation; Ionization; Sparks; Voltage;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Spectrum, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9235
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/MSPEC.1968.5215435
Filename :
5215435
Link To Document :
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