• DocumentCode
    563213
  • Title

    Liquid nitrogen as fast high voltage switching medium

  • Author

    Dickens, J. ; Neuber, A. ; Haustein, Mirko ; Krile, J. ; Krompholz, H.

  • Author_Institution
    Center for Pulsed Power and Power Electronics, Departments of Electrical and Computer Engineering & Physics, Texas Tech University, Lubbock. 79409-3102, USA
  • Volume
    1
  • fYear
    2002
  • fDate
    23-28 June 2002
  • Firstpage
    95
  • Lastpage
    98
  • Abstract
    Compact pulsed power systems require new switching technologies. For high voltages, liquid nitrogen seems to be a suitable switching medium, with high hold-off voltage, low dielectric constant, and no need for pressurized systems as in high pressure gas switches. The discharge behavior in liquid nitrogen, such as breakdown voltages, formative times, current rise as function of voltage, recovery, etc. are virtually unknown, however. The phenomenology of breakdown in liquid nitrogen is investigated with high speed (temporal resolution < 1 ns) electrical and optical diagnostics, in a coaxial system with 50-Ohm impedance. Discharge current and voltage are determined with transmission line type current sensors and capacitive voltage dividers. The discharge luminosity is measured with photomultiplier tubes. Preliminary results of self-breakdown investigations (gap 1 mm, breakdown voltage 44 kV, non-boiling supercooled nitrogen) show a fast (2 ns) transition from an unknown current level to several mA, a long-duration (100 ns) phase with constant current superimposed by ns-spikes, and a final fast transition to the impedance limited current during several nanoseconds. The optical measurements will be expanded toward spectroscopy and high speed photography with the aim of clarifying the overall breakdown mechanisms, including electronic initiation, bubble formation, bubble dynamics, and their role in breakdown, for different electrode geometries (different macroscopic field enhancements).
  • Keywords
    Current measurement; Electrodes; Liquids; Monitoring; Optical sensors; Optical switches; Optical variables measurement;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    High-Power Particle Beams (BEAMS), 2002 14th International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Albuquerque, NM, USA
  • ISSN
    0094-243X
  • Print_ISBN
    978-0-7354-0107-5
  • Type

    conf

  • Filename
    6219401