학술논문

Understanding dissolved gas analysis of ester liquids: An updated review of gas generated in ester liquid by stray gassing, thermal decomposition and electrical discharge
Document Type
Conference
Source
2016 IEEE Electrical Insulation Conference (EIC) IEEE Electrical Insulation Conference (EIC), 2016. :138-144 Jun, 2016
Subject
Aerospace
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Power, Energy and Industry Applications
Signal Processing and Analysis
Liquids
Oils
Oxidation
Minerals
Production
Gases
Dielectric liquids
DGA
Ester Liquids
Insulating Liquids
Stray Gassing
Thermal Faults
Partial Discharges
Language
Abstract
In the last twenty years, natural ester liquids have come into wider use. As with mineral oil, under normal operating conditions the ester liquid in transformers is not expected to produce gases. However ethane has frequently been observed without apparent fault activity (stray gassing) and other gases have been reported from routine analysis. Results from experimental study of the temperature, electrical discharges and light exposures influence on gas production in ester liquids are presented here. Thermal faults have also been reported as producing gas in ratios that differ from mineral oil. Pyrolysis studies are used to help understand the significance of different chemical structures and reveal that the quantities of gas generated by thermal faults in ester liquids is larger than that for mineral oil. A statistical study of results obtained in routine DGA to evaluate how this could affect caution and warning limit is also presented. Finally, preliminary results of a on-going study of decomposition under partial discharge and D1 discharge conditions are presented.