학술논문

Effects of DC Polarity and Field Uniformity on Breakdown of SF₆ and C₃F₇CN/CO₂ Mixture
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Dielectrics and Electrical Insulation IEEE Trans. Dielect. Electr. Insul. Dielectrics and Electrical Insulation, IEEE Transactions on. 29(6):2227-2235 Dec, 2022
Subject
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Electric breakdown
Bars
Electrodes
Gases
Voltage measurement
Electric fields
Breakdown voltage
Global warming
Electrical breakdown
field uniformity
gas insulation
heptafluoro-iso-butyronitrile (C₃F₇CN)
polarity effect
sulfur hexafluoride (SF₆)
Language
ISSN
1070-9878
1558-4135
Abstract
To address the issues of greenhouse gases and resultant global warming, there is an urgency to find an electronegative gas to replace SF6 in global power system networks. This article provides an experimental study of various factors on DC breakdown of electronegative gases. Rod-plane geometries with a range of rod diameters (3.5–12.5 mm) and electrode separations (5–55 mm) are used to provide different degrees of field uniformity. SF6 and a 20% C3F7CN / 80% CO2 mixture are tested under pressures ranging between 1 and 5 bar. Breakdown voltages (BDVs) under both polarities rise linearly with gap distance in quasi-uniform fields with the positive being higher. Increasingly nonuniform fields lead to saturation in the case of positive BDV, while in the negative polarity case, the BDV increases linearly. As a result, the two polarities’ BDV magnitudes crossover as field nonuniformity increases. The value at which the negative value exceeds the positive is dependent on the field uniformity, pressure, and gas medium. A simulation based on the streamer criterion model provides a good agreement with experimental results for positive DC breakdown in the range of 2–5 bar. In terms of the insulation characteristics, 20% C3F7CN / 80% CO2 could provide a valuable alternative to SF6 in high-voltage plant for outdoor applications in hot-climate countries and indoor applications in cold-climate countries.