Publication | Closed Access
Surface charge accumulation of solid insulator under nanosecond pulse in vacuum: 3D distribution features and mechanism
14
Citations
9
References
2017
Year
EngineeringHigh Voltage Electrical FieldsVacuum DeviceCharge TransportSurface Charge AccumulationSurface ChargesElectronic DevicesHigh Voltage EngineeringPulse PowerCharge ExtractionCharge Carrier TransportMaterials ScienceElectrical EngineeringPhysicsDistribution FeaturesNanotechnologySurface ChargeElectrical PropertySurface ScienceApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicsSolid InsulatorGas Discharge PlasmaElectrical Insulation
Surface charge accumulation can incur changes in electric field distribution, involved in the electron propagation process, and result in a significant decrease in the surface flashover voltage. The existing 2D surface charge measurement fails to meet the actual needs in real engineering applications that usually adopt the 45° conical frustum insulators. The present research developed a novel 3D measurement platform to capture surface charge distribution on solid insulation under nanosecond pulse in a vacuum. The results indicate that all surface charges are positive under a positive pulse and negative under a negative pulse. Surface charges tend to accumulate more near the upper electrode. Surface charge density increases significantly with the increase in pulse counts and amplitudes. Accumulation of surface charge results in a certain decrease of flashover voltage. Taking consideration of the secondary electron emission for the surface charge accumulation, four materials were obtained to demonstrate the effects on surface charge. Combining the effect incurred by secondary electron emission and the weighty action taken by surface charge accumulation on the flashover phenomena, the discharge mechanism along the insulator surface under nanosecond pulse voltage was proposed.
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