Title :
Electrical contact between a local discharge on an electrolytic solution and the solution surface [wet polluted insulators]
Author :
Matsuo, Hisao ; Yamashita, T. ; Shi, W.D.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Electron. Eng., Nagasaki Univ., Japan
fDate :
6/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
An electrolytic solution surface was used to simulate the surface of wet polluted insulators. A local discharge propagates on the solution surface when a voltage is applied to the surface. The electrical contact between the local discharge on the electrolytic solution and the solution surface was examined. The distribution of the current from the local discharge to the solution is estimated from the potential distribution measured with probes placed in the solution. The resistivity of the solution is varied from ~80 to 370 Ω cm. Impulse voltages of 2/80 μs, 10/800 μs and 100/2500 μs are used as the applied voltage. The peak value of the applied voltage was 1.05 to 1.4× the 50% flashover voltage V50 under each set of experimental conditions. As a result, it is found that most of the discharge current flows from the tip part of the local discharge, and the current from the local discharge column is considerably lower. Furthermore, the distribution of the current from the local discharge to the solution is found to be barely influenced by the resistivity of the solution, the peak value of the applied voltage, or the applied voltage waveform
Keywords :
current distribution; electrical contacts; electrolytes; flashover; impulse testing; insulator contamination; surface discharges; voltage distribution; 2 to 2500 mus; 80 to 370 ohmcm; KCl; KCl aqueous solution; applied voltage waveform; current distribution; discharge current; electrical contact; electrolytic solution surface; flashover voltage; impulse voltages; local discharge column; local discharge propagation; local discharge tip; potential distribution; probes; solution resistivity; wet polluted insulator surface simulation; Conductivity; Contacts; Current measurement; Flashover; Insulation; Pollution measurement; Probes; Surface contamination; Surface discharges; Voltage;
Journal_Title :
Dielectrics and Electrical Insulation, IEEE Transactions on