DocumentCode :
789700
Title :
Model Analysis of Self- and Laser-Triggered Electrical Breakdown of Liquid Water for Pulsed-Power Applications
Author :
Qian, Jun ; Joshi, Ravindra P. ; Schoenbach, Karl H. ; Woodworth, J.R. ; Sarkisov, G.S.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Old Dominion Univ., Norfolk, VA
Volume :
34
Issue :
5
fYear :
2006
Firstpage :
1680
Lastpage :
1691
Abstract :
Electrical breakdown simulations for liquids, in response to a submicrosecond (~100-200 ns) voltage pulse, are carried out. It is shown that breakdown is initiated by field emission at the interface of preexisting microbubbles. Impact ionization within the microbubble gas then contributes to plasma development, with cathode injection having a delayed and secondary role. The model used in this paper adequately explains experimentally the observations of prebreakdown current fluctuations, streamer propagation and branching, as well as disparities in hold-off voltage and breakdown initiation times between the anode and the cathode polarities. It is demonstrated that polarity effects basically arise from the large mobility difference between electrons and ions. Breakdown is shown to occur either through the application of an overvoltage pulse, or be triggered by an external laser under electrical stress. With laser excitation, a string of point plasma formation is predicted, followed by rapidly propagating streamers and subsequent breakdown. This matches the recent work at Sandia National Laboratories
Keywords :
bubbles; discharges (electric); field emission; impact ionisation; plasma fluctuations; plasma production by laser; plasma simulation; plasma transport processes; cathode injection; cathode polarities; electrical breakdown simulations; electrical stress; electron mobility; field emission; hold-off voltage; impact ionization; ion mobility; laser excitation; laser-triggered electrical breakdown; liquid water; microbubble gas; point plasma formation; prebreakdown current fluctuations; pulsed-power applications; streamer propagation; submicrosecond voltage pulse; Breakdown voltage; Cathodes; Electric breakdown; Gas lasers; Impact ionization; Laser modes; Liquids; Optical pulses; Plasma applications; Plasma simulation; Microbubble; polarity effect; submicrosecond pulse; water breakdown;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Plasma Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0093-3813
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TPS.2006.876520
Filename :
1710026
Link To Document :
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