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Electrical breakdown

In electronics, electrical breakdown or dielectric breakdown is a process that occurs when an electrically insulating material (a dielectric), subjected to a high enough voltage, suddenly becomes a conductor and current flows through it. All insulating materials undergo breakdown when the electric field caused by an applied voltage exceeds the material's dielectric strength. The voltage at which a given insulating object becomes conductive is called its breakdown voltage and, in addition to its dielectric strength, depends on its size and shape, and the location on the object at which the voltage is applied. Under sufficient voltage, electrical breakdown can occur within solids, liquids, or gases (and theoretically even in a vacuum). However, the specific breakdown mechanisms are different for each kind of dielectric medium.

Electrical breakdown in an electric discharge showing the ribbon-like plasma filaments from a Tesla coil.

Electrical breakdown may be a momentary event (as in an electrostatic discharge), or may lead to a continuous electric arc if protective devices fail to interrupt the current in a power circuit. In this case electrical breakdown can cause catastrophic failure of electrical equipment, and fire hazards.

Explanation edit

Electric current is a flow of electrically charged particles in a material caused by an electric field, usually created by a voltage across the material. The mobile charged particles which make up an electric current are called charge carriers. In different substances different particles serve as charge carriers: in metals and some other solids some of the outer electrons of each atom (conduction electrons) are able to move about in the material; in electrolytes and plasma it is ions, electrically charged atoms or molecules, and electrons that are charge carriers. A material that has a high concentration of charge carriers available for conduction, such as a metal, will conduct a large current with a given electric field, and thus has a low electrical resistivity; this is called an electrical conductor.[1] A material that has few charge carriers, such as glass or ceramic, will conduct very little current with a given electric field and has a high resistivity; this is called an electrical insulator or dielectric. All matter is composed of charged particles, but the common property of insulators is that the negative charges, the orbital electrons, are tightly bound to the positive charges, the atomic nuclei, and cannot easily be freed to become mobile.

However, when a large enough electric field is applied to any insulating substance, at a certain field strength the number of charge carriers in the material suddenly increases by many orders of magnitude, so its resistance drops and it becomes a conductor.[1] This is called electrical breakdown. The physical mechanism causing breakdown differs in different substances. In a solid, it usually occurs when the electric field becomes strong enough to pull outer valence electrons away from their atoms, so they become mobile, and the heat created by their collisions with other atoms releases additional electrons. In a gas, the electric field accelerates the small number of free electrons naturally present (due to processes like photoionization and radioactive decay) to a high enough speed that when they collide with gas molecules they knock additional electrons out of them, called ionization, which go on to ionize more molecules creating more free electrons and ions in a chain reaction called a Townsend discharge. As these examples indicate, in most materials breakdown occurs by a rapid chain reaction in which mobile charged particles release additional charged particles.

Dielectric strength and breakdown voltage edit

 
A Tesla coil, showing several forms of electrical breakdown. On the right side of the aluminum high voltage terminal (top right) is a purple corona discharge. At the end of the wire projecting from the terminal (top left) is a brush discharge. The fluorescent tube lying on the stand is lit by a glow discharge induced by the radio frequency electric field. At bottom the Tesla coil apparatus is lit by an intense white light from an electric arc in a spark gap which generates the high voltage

The electric field strength (in volts per metre) at which breakdown occurs is an intrinsic property of the insulating material called its dielectric strength. The electric field is usually caused by a voltage applied across the material. The applied voltage required to cause breakdown in a given insulating object is called the object's breakdown voltage. The electric field created in a given insulating object by an applied voltage varies depending on the size and shape of the object and the location on the object of the electrical contacts where the voltage is applied, so in addition to the material's dielectric strength, the breakdown voltage depends on these factors.

In a flat sheet of insulator between two flat metal electrodes, the electric field   is proportional to the voltage   divided by the thickness   of the insulator, so in general the breakdown voltage   is proportional to the dielectric strength   and the length of insulation between two conductors

 

However the shape of the conductors can influence the breakdown voltage.

Breakdown process edit

Breakdown is a local process, and in an insulating medium subjected to a high voltage difference begins at whatever point in the insulator the electric field first exceeds the local dielectric strength of the material. Since the electric field at the surface of a conductor is highest at protruding parts, sharp points and edges, for a conductor immersed in a homogeneous insulator like air or oil, breakdown usually starts at these points. In a solid insulator, breakdown often starts at a local defect , such as a crack or bubble in a ceramic insulator. If the voltage is low enough, breakdown may remain limited to this small region; this is called partial discharge. In a gas adjacent to a sharp pointed conductor, local breakdown processes, corona discharge or brush discharge, can allow current to leak off the conductor into the gas as ions. However, usually in a homogeneous solid insulator after one region has broken down and become conductive there is no voltage drop across it, and the full voltage difference is applied to the remaining length of the insulator. Since the voltage drop is now across a shorter length, this creates a higher electric field in the remaining material, which causes more material to break down. So the breakdown region rapidly (within nanoseconds) spreads in the direction of the voltage gradient (electric field) from one end of the insulator to the other, until a continuous conductive path is created through the material between the two contacts applying the voltage difference, allowing a current to flow between them, starting an electric arc.

Electrical breakdown can also occur without an applied voltage, due to an electromagnetic wave. When a sufficiently intense electromagnetic wave passes through a material medium, the electric field of the wave can be strong enough to cause temporary electrical breakdown. For example a laser beam focused to a small spot in air can cause electrical breakdown and ionization of the air at the focal point.

Consequences edit

In practical electric circuits electrical breakdown is usually an unwanted occurrence, a failure of insulating material causing a short circuit, possibly resulting in a catastrophic failure of the equipment. In power circuits, the sudden drop in resistance causes a high current to flow through the material, beginning an electric arc, and if safety devices do not interrupt the current quickly the sudden extreme Joule heating may cause the insulating material or other parts of the circuit to melt or vaporize explosively, damaging the equipment and creating a fire hazard. However, external protective devices in the circuit such as circuit breakers and current limiting can prevent the high current; and the breakdown process itself is not necessarily destructive and may be reversible. If the current supplied by the external circuit is removed sufficiently quickly, no damage is done to the material, and reducing the applied voltage causes a transition back to the material's insulating state.

Lightning and sparks due to static electricity are natural examples of the electrical breakdown of air. Electrical breakdown is part of the normal operating mode of a number of electrical components, such as gas discharge lamps like fluorescent lights, and neon lights, zener diodes, avalanche diodes, IMPATT diodes, mercury-vapor rectifiers, thyratron, ignitron, and krytron tubes, and spark plugs.

Failure of electrical insulation edit

Electrical breakdown is often associated with the failure of solid or liquid insulating materials used inside high voltage transformers or capacitors in the electricity distribution grid, usually resulting in a short circuit or a blown fuse. Electrical breakdown can also occur across the insulators that suspend overhead power lines, within underground power cables, or lines arcing to nearby branches of trees.

Dielectric breakdown is also important in the design of integrated circuits and other solid state electronic devices. Insulating layers in such devices are designed to withstand normal operating voltages, but higher voltage such as from static electricity may destroy these layers, rendering a device useless. The dielectric strength of capacitors limits how much energy can be stored and the safe working voltage for the device.[2]

Mechanisms edit

Breakdown mechanisms differ in solids, liquids, and gases. Breakdown is influenced by electrode material, sharp curvature of conductor material (resulting in locally intensified electric fields), the size of the gap between the electrodes, and the density of the material in the gap.

Solids edit

In solid materials (such as in power cables) a long-time partial discharge caused by a defect such as a crack or bubble in the material typically precedes breakdown. The partial discharge is a local ionization and heating of the area, degrading the insulators and metals nearest to the defect. Ultimately the partial discharge chars through a channel of carbonized material that conducts current across the gap.

Liquids edit

Possible mechanisms for breakdown in liquids include bubbles, small impurities, and electrical super-heating. The process of breakdown in liquids is complicated by hydrodynamic effects, since additional pressure is exerted on the fluid by the non-linear electrical field strength in the gap between the electrodes.

In liquefied gases used as coolants for superconductivity – such as Helium at 4.2 K or Nitrogen at 77 K – bubbles can induce breakdown.

In oil-cooled and oil-insulated transformers the field strength for breakdown is about 20 kV/mm (as compared to 3 kV/mm for dry air). Despite the purified oils used, small particle contaminants are blamed.

Gases edit

Electrical breakdown occurs within a gas when the dielectric strength of the gas is exceeded. Regions of intense voltage gradients can cause nearby gas to partially ionize and begin conducting. This is done deliberately in low pressure discharges such as in fluorescent lights. The voltage that leads to electrical breakdown of a gas is approximated by Paschen's Law.

Partial discharge in air causes the "fresh air" smell of ozone during thunderstorms or around high-voltage equipment. Although air is normally an excellent insulator, when stressed by a sufficiently high voltage (an electric field of about 3 x 106 V/m or 3 kV/mm[3]), air can begin to break down, becoming partially conductive. Across relatively small gaps, breakdown voltage in air is a function of gap length times pressure. If the voltage is sufficiently high, complete electrical breakdown of the air will culminate in an electrical spark or an electric arc that bridges the entire gap.

The color of the spark depends upon the gases that make up the gaseous media. While the small sparks generated by static electricity may barely be audible, larger sparks are often accompanied by a loud snap or bang. Lightning is an example of an immense spark that can be many miles long and thunder produced by it can be heard from a very large distance.

Persistent arcs edit

If a fuse or circuit breaker fails to interrupt the current through a spark in a power circuit, current may continue, forming a very hot electric arc (about 30 000 degrees C). The color of an arc depends primarily upon the conducting gasses, some of which may have been solids before being vaporized and mixed into the hot plasma in the arc. The free ions in and around the arc recombine to create new chemical compounds, such as ozone, carbon monoxide, and nitrous oxide. Ozone is most easily noticed due to its distinct odour.[4]

Although sparks and arcs are usually undesirable, they can be useful in applications such as spark plugs for gasoline engines, electrical welding of metals, or for metal melting in an electric arc furnace. Prior to gas discharge the gas glows with distinct colors that depend on the energy levels of the atoms. Not all mechanisms are fully understood.

 
Voltage-current relation before breakdown

The vacuum itself is expected to undergo electrical breakdown at or near the Schwinger limit.

Voltage-current relation edit

Before gas breakdown, there is a non-linear relation between voltage and current as shown in the figure. In region 1, there are free ions that can be accelerated by the field and induce a current. These will be saturated after a certain voltage and give a constant current, region 2. Region 3 and 4 are caused by ion avalanche as explained by the Townsend discharge mechanism.

Friedrich Paschen established the relation between the breakdown condition to breakdown voltage. He derived a formula that defines the breakdown voltage ( ) for uniform field gaps as a function of gap length ( ) and gap pressure ( ).[5]

 

Paschen also derived a relation between the minimum value of pressure gap for which breakdown occurs with a minimum voltage.[5]

 

  and   are constants depending on the gas used.

Corona breakdown edit

Partial breakdown of the air occurs as a corona discharge on high voltage conductors at points with the highest electrical stress. Conductors that have sharp points, or balls with small radii, are prone to causing dielectric breakdown, because the field strength around points is higher than that around a flat surface. High-voltage apparatus is designed with rounded curves and grading rings to avoid concentrated fields that precipitate breakdown.

Appearance edit

Corona is sometimes seen as a bluish glow around high voltage wires and heard as a sizzling sound along high voltage power lines. Corona also generates radio frequency noise that can also be heard as ‘static’ or buzzing on radio receivers. Corona can also occur naturally as "St. Elmo's Fire" at high points such as church spires, treetops, or ship masts during thunderstorms.

Ozone generation edit

Corona discharge ozone generators have been used for more than 30 years in the water purification process. Ozone is a toxic gas, even more potent than chlorine. In a typical drinking water treatment plant, the ozone gas is dissolved into the filtered water to kill bacteria and destroy viruses. Ozone also removes the bad odours and taste from the water. The main advantage of ozone is that any residual overdose decomposes to gaseous oxygen well before the water reaches the consumer. This is in contrast with chlorine gas or chlorine salts, which stay in the water longer and can be tasted by the consumer.

Other uses edit

Although corona discharge is usually undesirable, until recently it was essential in the operation of photocopiers (xerography) and laser printers. Many modern copiers and laser printers now charge the photoconductor drum with an electrically conductive roller, reducing undesirable indoor ozone pollution.

Lightning rods use corona discharge to create conductive paths in the air that point towards the rod, deflecting potentially-damaging lightning away from buildings and other structures.[6]

Corona discharges are also used to modify the surface properties of many polymers. An example is the corona treatment of plastic materials which allows paint or ink to adhere properly.

Disruptive devices edit

 
Dielectric breakdown within a solid insulator can permanently change its appearance and properties. As shown in this Lichtenberg figure

A disruptive device[citation needed] is designed to electrically overstress a dielectric beyond its dielectric strength so as to intentionally cause electrical breakdown of the device. The disruption causes a sudden transition of a portion of the dielectric, from an insulating state to a highly conductive state. This transition is characterized by the formation of an electric spark or plasma channel, possibly followed by an electric arc through part of the dielectric material.

If the dielectric happens to be a solid, permanent physical and chemical changes along the path of the discharge will significantly reduce the material's dielectric strength, and the device can only be used one time. However, if the dielectric material is a liquid or gas, the dielectric can fully recover its insulating properties once current through the plasma channel has been externally interrupted.

Commercial spark gaps use this property to abruptly switch high voltages in pulsed power systems, to provide surge protection for telecommunication and electrical power systems, and ignite fuel via spark plugs in internal combustion engines. Spark-gap transmitters were used in early radio telegraph systems.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Ray, Subir (2013). An Introduction to High Voltage Engineering, 2nd Ed. PHI Learning Ltd. p. 1. ISBN 9788120347403.
  2. ^ Belkin, A.; Bezryadin, A.; Hendren, L.; Hubler, A. (2017). "Recovery of Alumina Nanocapacitors after High Voltage Breakdown". Scientific Reports. 7 (1): 932. Bibcode:2017NatSR...7..932B. doi:10.1038/s41598-017-01007-9. PMC 5430567. PMID 28428625.
  3. ^ Hong, Alice (2000). "Dielectric Strength of Air". The Physics Factbook.
  4. ^ "Lab Note #106 Environmental Impact of Arc Suppression". Arc Suppression Technologies. April 2011. Retrieved March 15, 2012.
  5. ^ a b Ray, Subir (2009). An Introduction to High Voltage Engineering. PHI Learning. pp. 19–21. ISBN 978-8120324176.
  6. ^ Young, Hugh D.; Roger A. Freedman; A. Lewis Ford (2004) [1949]. "Electric Potential". Sears and Zemansky's University Physics (11 ed.). San Francisco: Addison Wesley. pp. 886–7. ISBN 0-8053-9179-7.

electrical, breakdown, electronics, electrical, breakdown, dielectric, breakdown, process, that, occurs, when, electrically, insulating, material, dielectric, subjected, high, enough, voltage, suddenly, becomes, conductor, current, flows, through, insulating, . In electronics electrical breakdown or dielectric breakdown is a process that occurs when an electrically insulating material a dielectric subjected to a high enough voltage suddenly becomes a conductor and current flows through it All insulating materials undergo breakdown when the electric field caused by an applied voltage exceeds the material s dielectric strength The voltage at which a given insulating object becomes conductive is called its breakdown voltage and in addition to its dielectric strength depends on its size and shape and the location on the object at which the voltage is applied Under sufficient voltage electrical breakdown can occur within solids liquids or gases and theoretically even in a vacuum However the specific breakdown mechanisms are different for each kind of dielectric medium Electrical breakdown in an electric discharge showing the ribbon like plasma filaments from a Tesla coil Electrical breakdown may be a momentary event as in an electrostatic discharge or may lead to a continuous electric arc if protective devices fail to interrupt the current in a power circuit In this case electrical breakdown can cause catastrophic failure of electrical equipment and fire hazards Contents 1 Explanation 1 1 Dielectric strength and breakdown voltage 1 2 Breakdown process 1 3 Consequences 2 Failure of electrical insulation 3 Mechanisms 3 1 Solids 3 2 Liquids 3 3 Gases 3 4 Persistent arcs 3 5 Voltage current relation 4 Corona breakdown 4 1 Appearance 4 2 Ozone generation 4 3 Other uses 5 Disruptive devices 6 See also 7 ReferencesExplanation editElectric current is a flow of electrically charged particles in a material caused by an electric field usually created by a voltage across the material The mobile charged particles which make up an electric current are called charge carriers In different substances different particles serve as charge carriers in metals and some other solids some of the outer electrons of each atom conduction electrons are able to move about in the material in electrolytes and plasma it is ions electrically charged atoms or molecules and electrons that are charge carriers A material that has a high concentration of charge carriers available for conduction such as a metal will conduct a large current with a given electric field and thus has a low electrical resistivity this is called an electrical conductor 1 A material that has few charge carriers such as glass or ceramic will conduct very little current with a given electric field and has a high resistivity this is called an electrical insulator or dielectric All matter is composed of charged particles but the common property of insulators is that the negative charges the orbital electrons are tightly bound to the positive charges the atomic nuclei and cannot easily be freed to become mobile However when a large enough electric field is applied to any insulating substance at a certain field strength the number of charge carriers in the material suddenly increases by many orders of magnitude so its resistance drops and it becomes a conductor 1 This is called electrical breakdown The physical mechanism causing breakdown differs in different substances In a solid it usually occurs when the electric field becomes strong enough to pull outer valence electrons away from their atoms so they become mobile and the heat created by their collisions with other atoms releases additional electrons In a gas the electric field accelerates the small number of free electrons naturally present due to processes like photoionization and radioactive decay to a high enough speed that when they collide with gas molecules they knock additional electrons out of them called ionization which go on to ionize more molecules creating more free electrons and ions in a chain reaction called a Townsend discharge As these examples indicate in most materials breakdown occurs by a rapid chain reaction in which mobile charged particles release additional charged particles Dielectric strength and breakdown voltage edit nbsp A Tesla coil showing several forms of electrical breakdown On the right side of the aluminum high voltage terminal top right is a purple corona discharge At the end of the wire projecting from the terminal top left is a brush discharge The fluorescent tube lying on the stand is lit by a glow discharge induced by the radio frequency electric field At bottom the Tesla coil apparatus is lit by an intense white light from an electric arc in a spark gap which generates the high voltageThe electric field strength in volts per metre at which breakdown occurs is an intrinsic property of the insulating material called its dielectric strength The electric field is usually caused by a voltage applied across the material The applied voltage required to cause breakdown in a given insulating object is called the object s breakdown voltage The electric field created in a given insulating object by an applied voltage varies depending on the size and shape of the object and the location on the object of the electrical contacts where the voltage is applied so in addition to the material s dielectric strength the breakdown voltage depends on these factors In a flat sheet of insulator between two flat metal electrodes the electric field E displaystyle E nbsp is proportional to the voltage V displaystyle V nbsp divided by the thickness D displaystyle D nbsp of the insulator so in general the breakdown voltage V b displaystyle V text b nbsp is proportional to the dielectric strength E ds displaystyle E text ds nbsp and the length of insulation between two conductors V b D E ds displaystyle V text b DE text ds nbsp However the shape of the conductors can influence the breakdown voltage Breakdown process edit Breakdown is a local process and in an insulating medium subjected to a high voltage difference begins at whatever point in the insulator the electric field first exceeds the local dielectric strength of the material Since the electric field at the surface of a conductor is highest at protruding parts sharp points and edges for a conductor immersed in a homogeneous insulator like air or oil breakdown usually starts at these points In a solid insulator breakdown often starts at a local defect such as a crack or bubble in a ceramic insulator If the voltage is low enough breakdown may remain limited to this small region this is called partial discharge In a gas adjacent to a sharp pointed conductor local breakdown processes corona discharge or brush discharge can allow current to leak off the conductor into the gas as ions However usually in a homogeneous solid insulator after one region has broken down and become conductive there is no voltage drop across it and the full voltage difference is applied to the remaining length of the insulator Since the voltage drop is now across a shorter length this creates a higher electric field in the remaining material which causes more material to break down So the breakdown region rapidly within nanoseconds spreads in the direction of the voltage gradient electric field from one end of the insulator to the other until a continuous conductive path is created through the material between the two contacts applying the voltage difference allowing a current to flow between them starting an electric arc Electrical breakdown can also occur without an applied voltage due to an electromagnetic wave When a sufficiently intense electromagnetic wave passes through a material medium the electric field of the wave can be strong enough to cause temporary electrical breakdown For example a laser beam focused to a small spot in air can cause electrical breakdown and ionization of the air at the focal point Consequences edit In practical electric circuits electrical breakdown is usually an unwanted occurrence a failure of insulating material causing a short circuit possibly resulting in a catastrophic failure of the equipment In power circuits the sudden drop in resistance causes a high current to flow through the material beginning an electric arc and if safety devices do not interrupt the current quickly the sudden extreme Joule heating may cause the insulating material or other parts of the circuit to melt or vaporize explosively damaging the equipment and creating a fire hazard However external protective devices in the circuit such as circuit breakers and current limiting can prevent the high current and the breakdown process itself is not necessarily destructive and may be reversible If the current supplied by the external circuit is removed sufficiently quickly no damage is done to the material and reducing the applied voltage causes a transition back to the material s insulating state Lightning and sparks due to static electricity are natural examples of the electrical breakdown of air Electrical breakdown is part of the normal operating mode of a number of electrical components such as gas discharge lamps like fluorescent lights and neon lights zener diodes avalanche diodes IMPATT diodes mercury vapor rectifiers thyratron ignitron and krytron tubes and spark plugs Failure of electrical insulation editElectrical breakdown is often associated with the failure of solid or liquid insulating materials used inside high voltage transformers or capacitors in the electricity distribution grid usually resulting in a short circuit or a blown fuse Electrical breakdown can also occur across the insulators that suspend overhead power lines within underground power cables or lines arcing to nearby branches of trees Dielectric breakdown is also important in the design of integrated circuits and other solid state electronic devices Insulating layers in such devices are designed to withstand normal operating voltages but higher voltage such as from static electricity may destroy these layers rendering a device useless The dielectric strength of capacitors limits how much energy can be stored and the safe working voltage for the device 2 Mechanisms editBreakdown mechanisms differ in solids liquids and gases Breakdown is influenced by electrode material sharp curvature of conductor material resulting in locally intensified electric fields the size of the gap between the electrodes and the density of the material in the gap Solids edit In solid materials such as in power cables a long time partial discharge caused by a defect such as a crack or bubble in the material typically precedes breakdown The partial discharge is a local ionization and heating of the area degrading the insulators and metals nearest to the defect Ultimately the partial discharge chars through a channel of carbonized material that conducts current across the gap Liquids edit Possible mechanisms for breakdown in liquids include bubbles small impurities and electrical super heating The process of breakdown in liquids is complicated by hydrodynamic effects since additional pressure is exerted on the fluid by the non linear electrical field strength in the gap between the electrodes In liquefied gases used as coolants for superconductivity such as Helium at 4 2 K or Nitrogen at 77 K bubbles can induce breakdown In oil cooled and oil insulated transformers the field strength for breakdown is about 20 kV mm as compared to 3 kV mm for dry air Despite the purified oils used small particle contaminants are blamed Gases edit Electrical breakdown occurs within a gas when the dielectric strength of the gas is exceeded Regions of intense voltage gradients can cause nearby gas to partially ionize and begin conducting This is done deliberately in low pressure discharges such as in fluorescent lights The voltage that leads to electrical breakdown of a gas is approximated by Paschen s Law Partial discharge in air causes the fresh air smell of ozone during thunderstorms or around high voltage equipment Although air is normally an excellent insulator when stressed by a sufficiently high voltage an electric field of about 3 x 106 V m or 3 kV mm 3 air can begin to break down becoming partially conductive Across relatively small gaps breakdown voltage in air is a function of gap length times pressure If the voltage is sufficiently high complete electrical breakdown of the air will culminate in an electrical spark or an electric arc that bridges the entire gap The color of the spark depends upon the gases that make up the gaseous media While the small sparks generated by static electricity may barely be audible larger sparks are often accompanied by a loud snap or bang Lightning is an example of an immense spark that can be many miles long and thunder produced by it can be heard from a very large distance Persistent arcs edit If a fuse or circuit breaker fails to interrupt the current through a spark in a power circuit current may continue forming a very hot electric arc about 30 000 degrees C The color of an arc depends primarily upon the conducting gasses some of which may have been solids before being vaporized and mixed into the hot plasma in the arc The free ions in and around the arc recombine to create new chemical compounds such as ozone carbon monoxide and nitrous oxide Ozone is most easily noticed due to its distinct odour 4 Although sparks and arcs are usually undesirable they can be useful in applications such as spark plugs for gasoline engines electrical welding of metals or for metal melting in an electric arc furnace Prior to gas discharge the gas glows with distinct colors that depend on the energy levels of the atoms Not all mechanisms are fully understood nbsp Voltage current relation before breakdownThe vacuum itself is expected to undergo electrical breakdown at or near the Schwinger limit Voltage current relation edit Before gas breakdown there is a non linear relation between voltage and current as shown in the figure In region 1 there are free ions that can be accelerated by the field and induce a current These will be saturated after a certain voltage and give a constant current region 2 Region 3 and 4 are caused by ion avalanche as explained by the Townsend discharge mechanism Friedrich Paschen established the relation between the breakdown condition to breakdown voltage He derived a formula that defines the breakdown voltage V b displaystyle V text b nbsp for uniform field gaps as a function of gap length d displaystyle d nbsp and gap pressure p displaystyle p nbsp 5 V b B p d ln A p d ln 1 1 g displaystyle V text b Bpd over ln left Apd over ln left 1 1 over gamma right right nbsp Paschen also derived a relation between the minimum value of pressure gap for which breakdown occurs with a minimum voltage 5 p d min 2 718 A ln 1 1 g V b min 2 718 B A ln 1 1 g displaystyle begin aligned pd min amp 2 718 over A ln left 1 frac 1 gamma right V text b min amp 2 718 B over A ln left 1 frac 1 gamma right end aligned nbsp A displaystyle A nbsp and B displaystyle B nbsp are constants depending on the gas used Corona breakdown editPartial breakdown of the air occurs as a corona discharge on high voltage conductors at points with the highest electrical stress Conductors that have sharp points or balls with small radii are prone to causing dielectric breakdown because the field strength around points is higher than that around a flat surface High voltage apparatus is designed with rounded curves and grading rings to avoid concentrated fields that precipitate breakdown Appearance edit Corona is sometimes seen as a bluish glow around high voltage wires and heard as a sizzling sound along high voltage power lines Corona also generates radio frequency noise that can also be heard as static or buzzing on radio receivers Corona can also occur naturally as St Elmo s Fire at high points such as church spires treetops or ship masts during thunderstorms Ozone generation edit Corona discharge ozone generators have been used for more than 30 years in the water purification process Ozone is a toxic gas even more potent than chlorine In a typical drinking water treatment plant the ozone gas is dissolved into the filtered water to kill bacteria and destroy viruses Ozone also removes the bad odours and taste from the water The main advantage of ozone is that any residual overdose decomposes to gaseous oxygen well before the water reaches the consumer This is in contrast with chlorine gas or chlorine salts which stay in the water longer and can be tasted by the consumer Other uses edit Although corona discharge is usually undesirable until recently it was essential in the operation of photocopiers xerography and laser printers Many modern copiers and laser printers now charge the photoconductor drum with an electrically conductive roller reducing undesirable indoor ozone pollution Lightning rods use corona discharge to create conductive paths in the air that point towards the rod deflecting potentially damaging lightning away from buildings and other structures 6 Corona discharges are also used to modify the surface properties of many polymers An example is the corona treatment of plastic materials which allows paint or ink to adhere properly Disruptive devices edit nbsp Dielectric breakdown within a solid insulator can permanently change its appearance and properties As shown in this Lichtenberg figureA disruptive device citation needed is designed to electrically overstress a dielectric beyond its dielectric strength so as to intentionally cause electrical breakdown of the device The disruption causes a sudden transition of a portion of the dielectric from an insulating state to a highly conductive state This transition is characterized by the formation of an electric spark or plasma channel possibly followed by an electric arc through part of the dielectric material If the dielectric happens to be a solid permanent physical and chemical changes along the path of the discharge will significantly reduce the material s dielectric strength and the device can only be used one time However if the dielectric material is a liquid or gas the dielectric can fully recover its insulating properties once current through the plasma channel has been externally interrupted Commercial spark gaps use this property to abruptly switch high voltages in pulsed power systems to provide surge protection for telecommunication and electrical power systems and ignite fuel via spark plugs in internal combustion engines Spark gap transmitters were used in early radio telegraph systems See also editComparative Tracking IndexReferences edit a b Ray Subir 2013 An Introduction to High Voltage Engineering 2nd Ed PHI Learning Ltd p 1 ISBN 9788120347403 Belkin A Bezryadin A Hendren L Hubler A 2017 Recovery of Alumina Nanocapacitors after High Voltage Breakdown Scientific Reports 7 1 932 Bibcode 2017NatSR 7 932B doi 10 1038 s41598 017 01007 9 PMC 5430567 PMID 28428625 Hong Alice 2000 Dielectric Strength of Air The Physics Factbook Lab Note 106 Environmental Impact of Arc Suppression Arc Suppression Technologies April 2011 Retrieved March 15 2012 a b Ray Subir 2009 An Introduction to High Voltage Engineering PHI Learning pp 19 21 ISBN 978 8120324176 Young Hugh D Roger A Freedman A Lewis Ford 2004 1949 Electric Potential Sears and Zemansky s University Physics 11 ed San Francisco Addison Wesley pp 886 7 ISBN 0 8053 9179 7 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Electrical breakdown Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Electrical breakdown amp oldid 1181193322 Disruptive devices, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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