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Paschen's law

Paschen's law is an equation that gives the breakdown voltage, that is, the voltage necessary to start a discharge or electric arc, between two electrodes in a gas as a function of pressure and gap length.[2][3] It is named after Friedrich Paschen who discovered it empirically in 1889.[4]

Paschen curves obtained for helium, neon, argon, hydrogen and nitrogen, using the expression for the breakdown voltage as a function of the parameters A,B that interpolate the first Townsend coefficient.[1]

Paschen studied the breakdown voltage of various gases between parallel metal plates as the gas pressure and gap distance were varied:

  • With a constant gap length, the voltage necessary to arc across the gap decreased as the pressure was reduced and then increased gradually, exceeding its original value.
  • With a constant pressure, the voltage needed to cause an arc reduced as the gap size was reduced but only to a point. As the gap was reduced further, the voltage required to cause an arc began to rise and again exceeded its original value.

For a given gas, the voltage is a function only of the product of the pressure and gap length.[2][3] The curve he found of voltage versus the pressure-gap length product (right) is called Paschen's curve. He found an equation that fit these curves, which is now called Paschen's law.[3]

At higher pressures and gap lengths, the breakdown voltage is approximately proportional to the product of pressure and gap length, and the term Paschen's law is sometimes used to refer to this simpler relation.[5] However, this is only roughly true, over a limited range of the curve.

Paschen curve

Early vacuum experimenters found a rather surprising behavior. An arc would sometimes take place in a long irregular path rather than at the minimal distance between the electrodes. For example, in air, at a pressure of one atmosphere, the distance for minimal breakdown voltage is about 7.5 μm. The voltage required to arc this distance is 327 V, which is insufficient to ignite the arcs for gaps that are either wider or narrower. For a 3.5 μm gap, the required voltage is 533 V, nearly twice as much. If 500 V were applied, it would not be sufficient to arc at the 2.85 μm distance, but would arc at a 7.5 μm distance.

Paschen found that breakdown voltage was described by the equation[1]

 

where   is the breakdown voltage in volts,   is the pressure in pascals,   is the gap distance in meters,   is the secondary-electron-emission coefficient (the number of secondary electrons produced per incident positive ion),   is the saturation ionization in the gas at a particular   (electric field/pressure), and   is related to the excitation and ionization energies.

The constants   and   are determined experimentally and found to be roughly constant over a restricted range of   for any given gas. For example, air with an   in the range of 450 to 7500 V/(kPa·cm),   = 112.50 (kPa·cm)−1 and   = 2737.50 V/(kPa·cm).[6]

The graph of this equation is the Paschen curve. By differentiating it with respect to   and setting the derivative to zero, the minimal voltage can be found. This yields

 

and predicts the occurrence of a minimal breakdown voltage for   = 7.5×10−6 m·atm. This is 327 V in air at standard atmospheric pressure at a distance of 7.5 μm.

The composition of the gas determines both the minimal arc voltage and the distance at which it occurs. For argon, the minimal arc voltage is 137 V at a larger 12 μm. For sulfur dioxide, the minimal arc voltage is 457 V at only 4.4 μm.

Long gaps

For air at standard conditions for temperature and pressure (STP), the voltage needed to arc a 1-metre gap is about 3.4 MV.[7] The intensity of the electric field for this gap is therefore 3.4 MV/m.

The electric field needed to arc across the minimal-voltage gap is much greater than what is necessary to arc a gap of one metre. At large gaps (or large pd) Paschen's Law is known to fail. The Meek Criteria for breakdown is usually used for large gaps. [8] It takes into account non-uniformity in the electric field and formation of streamers due to the build up of charge within the gap that can occur over long distances. For a 7.5 μm gap the arc voltage is 327 V, which is 43 MV/m. This is about 14 times greater than the field strength for the 1.5-metre gap. The phenomenon is well verified experimentally and is referred to as the Paschen minimum.

The equation loses accuracy for gaps under about 10 μm in air at one atmosphere[9] and incorrectly predicts an infinite arc voltage at a gap of about 2.7 micrometres. Breakdown voltage can also differ from the Paschen curve prediction for very small electrode gaps, when field emission from the cathode surface becomes important.

Physical mechanism

The mean free path of a molecule in a gas is the average distance between its collision with other molecules. This is inversely proportional to the pressure of the gas, given constant temperature. In air at STP the mean free path of molecules is about 96 nm. Since electrons are much smaller, their average distance between colliding with molecules is about 5.6 times longer, or about 0.5 μm. This is a substantial fraction of the 7.5 μm spacing between the electrodes for minimal arc voltage. If the electron is in an electric field of 43 MV/m, it will be accelerated and acquire 21.5 eV of energy in 0.5 μm of travel in the direction of the field. The first ionization energy needed to dislodge an electron from nitrogen molecule is about 15.6 eV. The accelerated electron will acquire more than enough energy to ionize a nitrogen molecule. This liberated electron will in turn be accelerated, which will lead to another collision. A chain reaction then leads to avalanche breakdown, and an arc takes place from the cascade of released electrons.[10]

More collisions will take place in the electron path between the electrodes in a higher-pressure gas. When the pressure–gap product   is high, an electron will collide with many different gas molecules as it travels from the cathode to the anode. Each of the collisions randomizes the electron direction, so the electron is not always being accelerated by the electric field—sometimes it travels back towards the cathode and is decelerated by the field.

Collisions reduce the electron's energy and make it more difficult for it to ionize a molecule. Energy losses from a greater number of collisions require larger voltages for the electrons to accumulate sufficient energy to ionize many gas molecules, which is required to produce an avalanche breakdown.

On the left side of the Paschen minimum, the   product is small. The electron mean free path can become long compared to the gap between the electrodes. In this case, the electrons might gain large amounts of energy, but have fewer ionizing collisions. A greater voltage is therefore required to assure ionization of enough gas molecules to start an avalanche.

Derivation

Basics

To calculate the breakthrough voltage, a homogeneous electrical field is assumed. This is the case in a parallel-plate capacitor setup. The electrodes may have the distance  . The cathode is located at the point  .

To get impact ionization, the electron energy   must become greater than the ionization energy   of the gas atoms between the plates. Per length of path   a number of   ionizations will occur.   is known as the first Townsend coefficient as it was introduced by Townsend. [11] The increase of the electron current  , can be described for the assumed setup as

 

 

 

 

 

(1)

(So the number of free electrons at the anode is equal to the number of free electrons at the cathode that were multiplied by impact ionization. The larger   and/or  , the more free electrons are created.)

The number of created electrons is

 

 

 

 

 

(2)

Neglecting possible multiple ionizations of the same atom, the number of created ions is the same as the number of created electrons:

 

 

 

 

 

(3)

  is the ion current. To keep the discharge going on, free electrons must be created at the cathode surface. This is possible because the ions hitting the cathode release secondary electrons at the impact. (For very large applied voltages also field electron emission can occur.) Without field emission, we can write

 

 

 

 

 

(4)

where   is the mean number of generated secondary electrons per ion. This is also known as the second Townsend coefficient. Assuming that  , one gets the relation between the Townsend coefficients by putting (4) into (3) and transforming:

 

 

 

 

 

(5)

Impact ionization

What is the amount of  ? The number of ionization depends upon the probability that an electron hits a gas molecule. This probability   is the relation of the cross-sectional area of a collision between electron and ion   in relation to the overall area   that is available for the electron to fly through:

 

 

 

 

 

(6)

As expressed by the second part of the equation, it is also possible to express the probability as relation of the path traveled by the electron   to the mean free path   (distance at which another collision occurs).

 
Visualization of the cross-section  : If the center of particle b penetrates the blue circle, a collision occurs with particle a. So the area of the circle is the cross-section and its radius   is the sum of the radii of the particles.

  is the number of molecules which electrons can hit. It can be calculated using the equation of state of the ideal gas

 

 

 

 

 

(7)

( : pressure,  : volume,  : Boltzmann constant,  : temperature)

The adjoining sketch illustrates that  . As the radius of an electron can be neglected compared to the radius of an ion   it simplifies to  . Using this relation, putting (7) into (6) and transforming to   one gets

 

 

 

 

 

(8)

where the factor   was only introduced for a better overview.

The alteration of the current of not yet collided electrons at every point in the path   can be expressed as

 

 

 

 

 

(9)

This differential equation can easily be solved:

 

 

 

 

 

(10)

The probability that   (that there was not yet a collision at the point  ) is

 

 

 

 

 

(11)

According to its definition   is the number of ionizations per length of path and thus the relation of the probability that there was no collision in the mean free path of the ions, and the mean free path of the electrons:

 

 

 

 

 

(12)

It was hereby considered that the energy   that a charged particle can get between a collision depends on the electric field strength   and the charge  :

 

 

 

 

 

(13)

Breakdown voltage

For the parallel-plate capacitor we have  , where   is the applied voltage. As a single ionization was assumed   is the elementary charge  . We can now put (13) and (8) into (12) and get

 

 

 

 

 

(14)

Putting this into (5) and transforming to   we get the Paschen law for the breakdown voltage   that was first investigated by Paschen in [4] and whose formula was first derived by Townsend in [12]

 

 

 

 

 

(15)

with  

Plasma ignition

Plasma ignition in the definition of Townsend (Townsend discharge) is a self-sustaining discharge, independent of an external source of free electrons. This means that electrons from the cathode can reach the anode in the distance   and ionize at least one atom on their way. So according to the definition of   this relation must be fulfilled:

 

 

 

 

 

(16)

If   is used instead of (5) one gets for the breakdown voltage

 

 

 

 

 

(17)

Conclusions, validity

Paschen's law requires that:

  • There are already free electrons at the cathode ( ) which can be accelerated to trigger impact ionization. Such so-called seed electrons can be created by ionization by natural radioactivity or cosmic rays.
  • The creation of further free electrons is only achieved by impact ionization. Thus Paschen's law is not valid if there are external electron sources. This can, for example, be a light source creating secondary electrons by the photoelectric effect. This has to be considered in experiments.
  • Each ionized atom leads to only one free electron. However, multiple ionizations occur always in practice.
  • Free electrons at the cathode surface are created by the impacting ions. The problem is that the number of thereby created electrons strongly depends on the material of the cathode, its surface (roughness, impurities) and the environmental conditions (temperature, humidity etc.). The experimental, reproducible determination of the factor   is therefore nearly impossible.
  • The electrical field is homogeneous.

Effects with different gases

Different gases will have different mean free paths for molecules and electrons. This is because different molecules have different diameters. Noble gases like helium and argon are monatomic and tend to have smaller diameters. This gives them greater mean free paths.

Ionization potentials differ between molecules, as well as the speed that they recapture electrons after they have been knocked out of orbit. All three effects change the number of collisions needed to cause an exponential growth in free electrons. These free electrons are necessary to cause an arc.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Lieberman, Michael A.; Lichtenberg, Allan J. (2005). Principles of plasma discharges and materials processing (2nd ed.). Hoboken, N.J.: Wiley-Interscience. 546. ISBN 978-0471005773. OCLC 59760348.
  2. ^ a b "Paschen's Law". Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary. Merriam-Webster, Inc. 2013. Retrieved June 9, 2017.
  3. ^ a b c Wadhwa, C.L. (2007). High Voltage Engineering (2nd ed.). New Age International. pp. 10–12. ISBN 978-8122418590.
  4. ^ a b Paschen, F. (1889). "Über die zum Funkenübergang in Luft, Wasserstoff und Kohlensäure bei verschiedenen Drucken erforderliche Potentialdifferenz". Annalen der Physik. 273 (5): 69–96. Bibcode:1889AnP...273...69P. doi:10.1002/andp.18892730505. hdl:2027/uc1.$b624756.
  5. ^ Graf, Rudolf F. (1999). Modern Dictionary of Electronics (7th ed.). Newnes. p. 542. ISBN 978-0750698665.
  6. ^ Husain, E.; Nema, R. (August 1982). "Analysis of Paschen Curves for air, N2 and SF6 Using the Townsend Breakdown Equation". IEEE Transactions on Electrical Insulation. EI-17 (4): 350–353. doi:10.1109/TEI.1982.298506. S2CID 35169293.
  7. ^ Tipler, Paul (1989). College physics. New York, NY: Worth Publishers. p. 467. ISBN 978-0879012687.
  8. ^ Meek, J. M. (1940-04-15). "A Theory of Spark Discharge". Physical Review. American Physical Society. 57 (8): 722--728. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.57.722.
  9. ^ Hourdakis, Emmanouel; Simonds, Brian J. & Zimmerman, Neil M. (2006). "Submicron gap capacitor for measurement of breakdown voltage in air". Rev. Sci. Instrum. 77 (3): 034702–034702–4. Bibcode:2006RScI...77c4702H. doi:10.1063/1.2185149.
  10. ^ Electrical Discharges-How the spark, glow and arc work.
  11. ^ Townsend, J. S. (1910). "17. Conductivity between parallel plates when positive and negative ions generate others by collisions.". The Theory of Ionization of Gases by Collision. Constable.
  12. ^ Townsend, J. S. (1915). "227. Sparking potential as a function of the number of molecules between parallel plates". Electricity in Gases. Clarendon Press.

External links

  • Electrical breakdown limits for MEMS
  • High Voltage Experimenter's Handbook 2011-10-16 at the Wayback Machine
  • Paschen's law calculator
  • Breakdown Voltage vs. Pressure
  • Electrical Discharges
  • Pressure Dependence of Plasma Structure in Microwave Gas Breakdown at 110GHz

paschen, equation, that, gives, breakdown, voltage, that, voltage, necessary, start, discharge, electric, between, electrodes, function, pressure, length, named, after, friedrich, paschen, discovered, empirically, 1889, paschen, curves, obtained, helium, neon,. Paschen s law is an equation that gives the breakdown voltage that is the voltage necessary to start a discharge or electric arc between two electrodes in a gas as a function of pressure and gap length 2 3 It is named after Friedrich Paschen who discovered it empirically in 1889 4 Paschen curves obtained for helium neon argon hydrogen and nitrogen using the expression for the breakdown voltage as a function of the parameters A B that interpolate the first Townsend coefficient 1 Paschen studied the breakdown voltage of various gases between parallel metal plates as the gas pressure and gap distance were varied With a constant gap length the voltage necessary to arc across the gap decreased as the pressure was reduced and then increased gradually exceeding its original value With a constant pressure the voltage needed to cause an arc reduced as the gap size was reduced but only to a point As the gap was reduced further the voltage required to cause an arc began to rise and again exceeded its original value For a given gas the voltage is a function only of the product of the pressure and gap length 2 3 The curve he found of voltage versus the pressure gap length product right is called Paschen s curve He found an equation that fit these curves which is now called Paschen s law 3 At higher pressures and gap lengths the breakdown voltage is approximately proportional to the product of pressure and gap length and the term Paschen s law is sometimes used to refer to this simpler relation 5 However this is only roughly true over a limited range of the curve Contents 1 Paschen curve 1 1 Long gaps 2 Physical mechanism 3 Derivation 3 1 Basics 3 2 Impact ionization 3 3 Breakdown voltage 3 4 Plasma ignition 4 Conclusions validity 5 Effects with different gases 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksPaschen curve EditEarly vacuum experimenters found a rather surprising behavior An arc would sometimes take place in a long irregular path rather than at the minimal distance between the electrodes For example in air at a pressure of one atmosphere the distance for minimal breakdown voltage is about 7 5 mm The voltage required to arc this distance is 327 V which is insufficient to ignite the arcs for gaps that are either wider or narrower For a 3 5 mm gap the required voltage is 533 V nearly twice as much If 500 V were applied it would not be sufficient to arc at the 2 85 mm distance but would arc at a 7 5 mm distance Paschen found that breakdown voltage was described by the equation 1 V B B p d ln A p d ln ln 1 1 g se displaystyle V text B frac Bpd ln Apd ln left ln left 1 frac 1 gamma text se right right where V B displaystyle V text B is the breakdown voltage in volts p displaystyle p is the pressure in pascals d displaystyle d is the gap distance in meters g se displaystyle gamma text se is the secondary electron emission coefficient the number of secondary electrons produced per incident positive ion A displaystyle A is the saturation ionization in the gas at a particular E p displaystyle E p electric field pressure and B displaystyle B is related to the excitation and ionization energies The constants A displaystyle A and B displaystyle B are determined experimentally and found to be roughly constant over a restricted range of E p displaystyle E p for any given gas For example air with an E p displaystyle E p in the range of 450 to 7500 V kPa cm A displaystyle A 112 50 kPa cm 1 and B displaystyle B 2737 50 V kPa cm 6 The graph of this equation is the Paschen curve By differentiating it with respect to p d displaystyle pd and setting the derivative to zero the minimal voltage can be found This yields p d e ln 1 1 g s e A displaystyle pd frac e cdot ln left 1 frac 1 mathit gamma se right A and predicts the occurrence of a minimal breakdown voltage for p d displaystyle pd 7 5 10 6 m atm This is 327 V in air at standard atmospheric pressure at a distance of 7 5 mm The composition of the gas determines both the minimal arc voltage and the distance at which it occurs For argon the minimal arc voltage is 137 V at a larger 12 mm For sulfur dioxide the minimal arc voltage is 457 V at only 4 4 mm Long gaps Edit For air at standard conditions for temperature and pressure STP the voltage needed to arc a 1 metre gap is about 3 4 MV 7 The intensity of the electric field for this gap is therefore 3 4 MV m The electric field needed to arc across the minimal voltage gap is much greater than what is necessary to arc a gap of one metre At large gaps or large pd Paschen s Law is known to fail The Meek Criteria for breakdown is usually used for large gaps 8 It takes into account non uniformity in the electric field and formation of streamers due to the build up of charge within the gap that can occur over long distances For a 7 5 mm gap the arc voltage is 327 V which is 43 MV m This is about 14 times greater than the field strength for the 1 5 metre gap The phenomenon is well verified experimentally and is referred to as the Paschen minimum The equation loses accuracy for gaps under about 10 mm in air at one atmosphere 9 and incorrectly predicts an infinite arc voltage at a gap of about 2 7 micrometres Breakdown voltage can also differ from the Paschen curve prediction for very small electrode gaps when field emission from the cathode surface becomes important Physical mechanism EditThe mean free path of a molecule in a gas is the average distance between its collision with other molecules This is inversely proportional to the pressure of the gas given constant temperature In air at STP the mean free path of molecules is about 96 nm Since electrons are much smaller their average distance between colliding with molecules is about 5 6 times longer or about 0 5 mm This is a substantial fraction of the 7 5 mm spacing between the electrodes for minimal arc voltage If the electron is in an electric field of 43 MV m it will be accelerated and acquire 21 5 eV of energy in 0 5 mm of travel in the direction of the field The first ionization energy needed to dislodge an electron from nitrogen molecule is about 15 6 eV The accelerated electron will acquire more than enough energy to ionize a nitrogen molecule This liberated electron will in turn be accelerated which will lead to another collision A chain reaction then leads to avalanche breakdown and an arc takes place from the cascade of released electrons 10 More collisions will take place in the electron path between the electrodes in a higher pressure gas When the pressure gap product p d displaystyle pd is high an electron will collide with many different gas molecules as it travels from the cathode to the anode Each of the collisions randomizes the electron direction so the electron is not always being accelerated by the electric field sometimes it travels back towards the cathode and is decelerated by the field Collisions reduce the electron s energy and make it more difficult for it to ionize a molecule Energy losses from a greater number of collisions require larger voltages for the electrons to accumulate sufficient energy to ionize many gas molecules which is required to produce an avalanche breakdown On the left side of the Paschen minimum the p d displaystyle pd product is small The electron mean free path can become long compared to the gap between the electrodes In this case the electrons might gain large amounts of energy but have fewer ionizing collisions A greater voltage is therefore required to assure ionization of enough gas molecules to start an avalanche Derivation EditBasics Edit To calculate the breakthrough voltage a homogeneous electrical field is assumed This is the case in a parallel plate capacitor setup The electrodes may have the distance d displaystyle d The cathode is located at the point x 0 displaystyle x 0 To get impact ionization the electron energy E e displaystyle E e must become greater than the ionization energy E I displaystyle E text I of the gas atoms between the plates Per length of path x displaystyle x a number of a displaystyle alpha ionizations will occur a displaystyle alpha is known as the first Townsend coefficient as it was introduced by Townsend 11 The increase of the electron current G e displaystyle Gamma e can be described for the assumed setup as G e x d G e x 0 e a d displaystyle Gamma e x d Gamma e x 0 e alpha d 1 So the number of free electrons at the anode is equal to the number of free electrons at the cathode that were multiplied by impact ionization The larger d displaystyle d and or a displaystyle alpha the more free electrons are created The number of created electrons is G e d G e 0 G e 0 e a d 1 displaystyle Gamma e d Gamma e 0 Gamma e 0 left e alpha d 1 right 2 Neglecting possible multiple ionizations of the same atom the number of created ions is the same as the number of created electrons G i 0 G i d G e 0 e a d 1 displaystyle Gamma i 0 Gamma i d Gamma e 0 left e alpha d 1 right 3 G i displaystyle Gamma i is the ion current To keep the discharge going on free electrons must be created at the cathode surface This is possible because the ions hitting the cathode release secondary electrons at the impact For very large applied voltages also field electron emission can occur Without field emission we can write G e 0 g G i 0 displaystyle Gamma e 0 gamma Gamma i 0 4 where g displaystyle gamma is the mean number of generated secondary electrons per ion This is also known as the second Townsend coefficient Assuming that G i d 0 displaystyle Gamma i d 0 one gets the relation between the Townsend coefficients by putting 4 into 3 and transforming a d ln 1 1 g displaystyle alpha d ln left 1 frac 1 gamma right 5 Impact ionization Edit What is the amount of a displaystyle alpha The number of ionization depends upon the probability that an electron hits a gas molecule This probability P displaystyle P is the relation of the cross sectional area of a collision between electron and ion s displaystyle sigma in relation to the overall area A displaystyle A that is available for the electron to fly through P N s A x l displaystyle P frac N sigma A frac x lambda 6 As expressed by the second part of the equation it is also possible to express the probability as relation of the path traveled by the electron x displaystyle x to the mean free path l displaystyle lambda distance at which another collision occurs Visualization of the cross section s displaystyle sigma If the center of particle b penetrates the blue circle a collision occurs with particle a So the area of the circle is the cross section and its radius r displaystyle r is the sum of the radii of the particles N displaystyle N is the number of molecules which electrons can hit It can be calculated using the equation of state of the ideal gas p V N k B T displaystyle pV Nk B T 7 p displaystyle p pressure V displaystyle V volume k B displaystyle k B Boltzmann constant T displaystyle T temperature The adjoining sketch illustrates that s p r a r b 2 displaystyle sigma pi r a r b 2 As the radius of an electron can be neglected compared to the radius of an ion r I displaystyle r I it simplifies to s p r I 2 displaystyle sigma pi r I 2 Using this relation putting 7 into 6 and transforming to l displaystyle lambda one gets l k B T p p r I 2 1 L p displaystyle lambda frac k B T p pi r I 2 frac 1 L cdot p 8 where the factor L displaystyle L was only introduced for a better overview The alteration of the current of not yet collided electrons at every point in the path x displaystyle x can be expressed as d G e x G e x d x l e displaystyle mathrm d Gamma e x Gamma e x frac mathrm d x lambda e 9 This differential equation can easily be solved G e x G e 0 exp x l e displaystyle Gamma e x Gamma e 0 exp left frac x lambda e right 10 The probability that l gt x displaystyle lambda gt x that there was not yet a collision at the point x displaystyle x is P l gt x G e x G e 0 exp x l e displaystyle P lambda gt x frac Gamma e x Gamma e 0 exp left frac x lambda e right 11 According to its definition a displaystyle alpha is the number of ionizations per length of path and thus the relation of the probability that there was no collision in the mean free path of the ions and the mean free path of the electrons a P l gt l I l e 1 l e exp l I l e 1 l e exp E I E e displaystyle alpha frac P lambda gt lambda I lambda e frac 1 lambda e exp left frac lambda I lambda e right frac 1 lambda e exp left frac E I E e right 12 It was hereby considered that the energy E displaystyle E that a charged particle can get between a collision depends on the electric field strength E displaystyle mathcal E and the charge Q displaystyle Q E l Q E displaystyle E lambda Q mathcal E 13 Breakdown voltage Edit For the parallel plate capacitor we have E U d displaystyle mathcal E frac U d where U displaystyle U is the applied voltage As a single ionization was assumed Q displaystyle Q is the elementary charge e displaystyle e We can now put 13 and 8 into 12 and get a L p exp L p d E I e U displaystyle alpha L cdot p exp left frac L cdot p cdot d cdot E I eU right 14 Putting this into 5 and transforming to U displaystyle U we get the Paschen law for the breakdown voltage U b r e a k d o w n displaystyle U mathrm breakdown that was first investigated by Paschen in 4 and whose formula was first derived by Townsend in 12 U breakdown L p d E I e ln L p d ln ln 1 g 1 15 displaystyle U text breakdown frac L cdot p cdot d cdot E I e left ln L cdot p cdot d ln left ln left 1 gamma 1 right right right qquad qquad 15 15 with L p r I 2 k B T textstyle L frac pi r I 2 k B T Plasma ignition Edit Plasma ignition in the definition of Townsend Townsend discharge is a self sustaining discharge independent of an external source of free electrons This means that electrons from the cathode can reach the anode in the distance d displaystyle d and ionize at least one atom on their way So according to the definition of a displaystyle alpha this relation must be fulfilled a d 1 displaystyle alpha d geq 1 16 If a d 1 displaystyle alpha d 1 is used instead of 5 one gets for the breakdown voltage U b r e a k d o w n T o w n s e n d L p d E I e ln L p d d E I e l e ln d l e displaystyle U mathrm breakdown Townsend frac L cdot p cdot d cdot E I e cdot ln L cdot p cdot d frac d cdot E I e cdot lambda e ln left frac d lambda e right 17 Conclusions validity EditPaschen s law requires that There are already free electrons at the cathode G e x 0 0 displaystyle Gamma e x 0 neq 0 which can be accelerated to trigger impact ionization Such so called seed electrons can be created by ionization by natural radioactivity or cosmic rays The creation of further free electrons is only achieved by impact ionization Thus Paschen s law is not valid if there are external electron sources This can for example be a light source creating secondary electrons by the photoelectric effect This has to be considered in experiments Each ionized atom leads to only one free electron However multiple ionizations occur always in practice Free electrons at the cathode surface are created by the impacting ions The problem is that the number of thereby created electrons strongly depends on the material of the cathode its surface roughness impurities and the environmental conditions temperature humidity etc The experimental reproducible determination of the factor g displaystyle gamma is therefore nearly impossible The electrical field is homogeneous Effects with different gases EditDifferent gases will have different mean free paths for molecules and electrons This is because different molecules have different diameters Noble gases like helium and argon are monatomic and tend to have smaller diameters This gives them greater mean free paths Ionization potentials differ between molecules as well as the speed that they recapture electrons after they have been knocked out of orbit All three effects change the number of collisions needed to cause an exponential growth in free electrons These free electrons are necessary to cause an arc See also EditAtmospheric pressure Breakdown voltage Dielectric strength Townsend dischargeReferences Edit a b Lieberman Michael A Lichtenberg Allan J 2005 Principles of plasma discharges and materials processing 2nd ed Hoboken N J Wiley Interscience 546 ISBN 978 0471005773 OCLC 59760348 a b Paschen s Law Merriam Webster Online Dictionary Merriam Webster Inc 2013 Retrieved June 9 2017 a b c Wadhwa C L 2007 High Voltage Engineering 2nd ed New Age International pp 10 12 ISBN 978 8122418590 a b Paschen F 1889 Uber die zum Funkenubergang in Luft Wasserstoff und Kohlensaure bei verschiedenen Drucken erforderliche Potentialdifferenz Annalen der Physik 273 5 69 96 Bibcode 1889AnP 273 69P doi 10 1002 andp 18892730505 hdl 2027 uc1 b624756 Graf Rudolf F 1999 Modern Dictionary of Electronics 7th ed Newnes p 542 ISBN 978 0750698665 Husain E Nema R August 1982 Analysis of Paschen Curves for air N2 and SF6 Using the Townsend Breakdown Equation IEEE Transactions on Electrical Insulation EI 17 4 350 353 doi 10 1109 TEI 1982 298506 S2CID 35169293 Tipler Paul 1989 College physics New York NY Worth Publishers p 467 ISBN 978 0879012687 Meek J M 1940 04 15 A Theory of Spark Discharge Physical Review American Physical Society 57 8 722 728 doi 10 1103 PhysRev 57 722 Hourdakis Emmanouel Simonds Brian J amp Zimmerman Neil M 2006 Submicron gap capacitor for measurement of breakdown voltage in air Rev Sci Instrum 77 3 034702 034702 4 Bibcode 2006RScI 77c4702H doi 10 1063 1 2185149 Electrical Discharges How the spark glow and arc work Townsend J S 1910 17 Conductivity between parallel plates when positive and negative ions generate others by collisions The Theory of Ionization of Gases by Collision Constable Townsend J S 1915 227 Sparking potential as a function of the number of molecules between parallel plates Electricity in Gases Clarendon Press External links EditElectrical breakdown limits for MEMS High Voltage Experimenter s Handbook Archived 2011 10 16 at the Wayback Machine Paschen s law calculator Breakdown Voltage vs Pressure Electrical Breakdown of Low Pressure Gases Electrical Discharges Pressure Dependence of Plasma Structure in Microwave Gas Breakdown at 110GHz Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Paschen 27s law amp oldid 1125212873, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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