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발표자 : 정의환 9.1 Tracking 9.2 Low-voltage tests 9.3 Medium-voltage test 9.4 High-voltage test 9.5 Theory of tracking 9.6 Breakdown by discharges in solids 9.7 Discharge detection Definition - Tracking is the formation of a permanent conducting path across a surface of the insulation. - The conduction results from degradation of the insulation itself. - Tracking is an untidy process. - Incidence depends upon the insulation but its inception depends upon several other factors. - Its necessary for organic insulation to be present if tracking is to occur. Three essentials of the tracking phenomenon (1)The presence of a conducting film across the surface of the insulation (2)A mechanism whereby the leakage current through the conducting film is interrupted with the production of sparks (3)Degradation of the insulation must be caused by the sparks ♦ the process of tracking Surface pollution Leakage current Evaporation by joule heat Formation of dry band Generation of scintillation Surface erosion Generation of conductive track Progressing of track Breakdown by tracking - The conducting film is usually moisture from the atmosphere absorbed by some form of contamination such as salt in coastal areas, carbonaceous dust from fuel or brush gear, industrial deposits, or cellulose fibres. - Moisture is not essential, as a conducting path can arise from metal dust. - Interruption of moisture film is caused by drying of the surface following the heating effect of the leakage current. - Sparks are drawn between the separating moisture films, which act as extensions to the electrodes, and damage is done. ☞ - This represents a significant difference between tracking and discharge failure. - For a discharge to occur there must be a voltage at least equal to the Paschen minimum for the particular state of the gas, 380V at s.t.p. in air, whereas tracking can occur at well below 100V: it does not depend on gaseous breakdown. - In the case of conducting particles in oil the mechanism of interruption is one of bad contact between adjacent particles, which draws sparks across the surface of the supporting insulation. - Degradation of the insulation is almost exclusively the result of heat from the sparks, and this heat either carbonizes or volatilizes the insulation if tracking is to occur. - This emphasizes the point that for all practical purposes tracking can only occur with organic insulation. - Carbonization results in a permanent extension of the electrodes and usually takes form of a dendritic growth. - Degradation by discharges is accelerated by the high stress at the end of a discharge channel. - With tracking, it is the concentration of current at the end of the carbonized channel that causes drying of subsequent moisture films at this point, and further damage. - Erosion, the second form of damage, is not so disastrous as carbonization, since it does not immediately produce concentrations of leakage current. - Erosion may lead to penetration of the insulation to electrode or may even cause mechanical failure. - It causes a roughening of the surface, which aids contamination and way to carbonization. - Perspex is an example of a material which will not carbonize although considerable erosion can occur. - Degradation may be accelerated by extraneous processes, such as physical weathering, ultra-violet radiation and chemical attack. - Ozone and oxides of nitrogen generated by discharges may degrade the insulation and provide sources of contamination. ☺ We know what tracking is two problems arise. (1) (2) How do we stop tracking? How do we assess the tracking liability of insulation? Prevention of tracking clean Undamage d Undamage dsurfaces surfaces Design dry Track resistant of the materials - Help by limiting access of dirt - Avoiding its accumulation areas between conductors. Some well-established insulating materials that are used in high- voltage engineering will track at 100V, so a low-voltage test method is needed. I.E.C. test given in publication 112 Two chisel-edged electrodes, usually of brass, are rested on the horizontal test piece 4mm apart Drops of specified size of 0.1% ammonium chloride solution fall between the electrodes at 30-s intervals. Voltage is applied to the electrodes Each drop is boiled off by the current passing through it. Drying of each drop sparks appear on the surface, may damage the insulation. - The number of drops required to cause failure is found for several voltages. ☞ curve of drops-tofailure against voltage constructed. - As the voltage is decreased the number of drops increases and at a particular voltage the curve becomes asymptotic. - For the majority of insulation the value of the voltage corresponding to 50 drops is a good approximation to the asymptote, and is taken as the C.T.I., but for some materials, tests must be made for 100-200 drops before an asymptote is apparent. § C.T.I. (Comparative Tracking Index): used to measure the electrical breakdown (tracking) properties of an insulating material. - Kaufmann describes a modification in which the solution is sprayed onto a sloping test-piece so that unused liquid runs off taking with it electrode and insulation contamination. - This method claims to be independent of the electrode material; something that is certainly not true for the standard I.E.C. method. ♦ C.T.I. values on the I.E.C. or B.S test Tracking index(V) materials 100-140 A phenolic bonded paper board Mineral-filled alkyd resins 200-300 600 or more Perspex, silicone rubber, polythene Brief mention will be made to the dust-fog test(A.S.T.M.D.2132-62T) A high-voltage electrode ½*2 in is placed on the insulation Two similar earthed electrodes are placed either side of the highvoltage electrode and 1 inch away A dust comprising 94% inorganic inert material, 3% sodium chloride, 3% cellulose, is put on the insulation Tap-water fog is created with a specified deposition rate. - Test is started by cleaning a path around the high-voltage electrode(applying 500-700V) - When sparking is established 1500V are applied until failure occurs. - Changes in conductivity of the fog sometimes have to be made to maintain sparking. - One test can take 100h or more. The inclined-plane test is a similar test to the I.E.C. test, but can be used up to 6 or 7kV. It is being proposed as a standard test internationally. Two stainless-steel electrodes are clamped to the specimen, with 50mm spacing. Specimen is set up with its longer axis at 45° to the vertical Electrodes attached to the underside. A solution of 0.1% ammonium chloride with a little wetting agent is fed into a filter-paper pad clamped under the top electrode and flows down the undersurface to the lower electrode. In steps of 0.25kV, which will cause uniform sparking over the wetted surface is applied. - At the end of each hour thereafter the voltage is increased 0.25kV until failure or flashover occurs. - In this way materials are graded in terms of the voltage at which they fail. § Two advantages of this test. 1. A test is complete in 4 to 6h 2. The tracking path is very similar to that obtained over several years of exposure to normal weather conditions. ∴ This method appears to be suitable for rapid evaluation of materials that may be track resistant under hazardous exposure conditions. - A theory of tracking in terms of chemical bond energies has been suggested. : by Parr & Scarisbrick The tendency to track, depends on the proportion of the bonds which produce free carbon on pyrolysis. ∆Hc : The energy of all the bonds which on breaking produce free carbon ∆HcPD : The total bond energy of the molecule √ The lower the fraction ∆Hc/ ∆HcPD the less likely is the material to track. √ ex) 분수의 값이 0.4이상이면 트랙킹 파괴형이고, 0.4이하 0.2까지는 방전에 의한 침식형이고 이 침식형의 고분자 재료 는 내트래킹성이 양호하다고 말 할 수있다. ☞ this theory is a very simplified one and cannot take into account the effect, for example, of fillers in resins, or of thermal conductivity. Fraction plotted against time to failure for several materials tested in the dust-fog test - Discharges on the surface, or in cavities in insulation, will occur whenever the stress in the gas exceeds its breakdown value. - (If the discharge can choose its own path, as is the case for most surface discharges, then the critical stress will correspond to the Paschen minimum for the gas, which for air at s.t.p. is about 380kV/cm. - If the path is pre-determined, as when it is across a cavity or between layers of insulation, then the critical stress will depend on the dimension of the gap parallel to the filed. - Although in this case the stress may be below 380kV/cm, the voltage across the gap will exceed 380V. Cause of surface discharges Cause of internal discharges inadequate stress relief At high voltages & where a limited life is acceptable Designed stress relief may be invalidated by leakage due to contamination. Cavities in solid insulation Poor design & manufacture Eventual effect: failure of the insulation. Erosion initially the damage caused by discharges is erosion over a comparatively large area. Roughens the surface Slowly penetrates the insulation Not the cause of rapid failure. Gives way to channel propagation and dendritic growth through the remaining insulation. By virtue of the high stresses created at the tips of the channels they propagate rapidly and are the cause of failure. The channels are conducting either because their walls are carbonized or because the gases therein are highly ionized. In the presence of moisture, discharges can be suppressed by deliquescent discharge products; cavities can cease to discharge (remain dormant until these products have diffused into the body of the material.) The evils of over-voltage testing will be discussed. a.c. voltage test d.c. voltage test Several times the working voltage Apply to an equipment for 1min or more to satisfy a specification. Dangerous procedure. Object to detect gross faults in the insulation Its result may well be to initiate discharge channels and lower the discharge-inception voltage of the system below the working voltage. In 1min at 50c/s there may be 6000 discharges; more than may be caused by surges or over-voltages in the whole of its normal service. ∴ the test should be replaced by a d.c. over-voltage test. This will still find the gross fault Few discharges since the rate of discharge now depends on the R.C. of the circuit. The use of an instrument which will detect small discharges will show the incidence and in many cases the cause of discharges in the region of their inception voltage. - Evaluation of materials in terms of discharge resistance is best done with the rod-plane system. - A 6mm stainless-steel rod is cut off square and placed on the insulation on a stainless-steel plate. - The system is put in a ventilated dry-air enclosure and voltage applied between the electrodes. (the discharge inception voltage 1.5~7 times) ♣ result.. - failure is not caused by thermal instability. - the frequency of the test voltage can be increased to accelerate this test. - Life is proportional to the number of discharges. - Basic circuit. - the impedances of the detector and of the high-voltage supply are assumed to be infinite to the step wave produced by the discharge, and the internal impedance of the step-wave generator is taken to be negligible. - matching units are tuned to give a resonant circuit in the range 12 to 50 kc/s - matching units permit measurements to be made with specimen capacitances of from 6pF~250pF with sensitivities of 0.005 pC~15pC. - Calibration is by the injection of a known step-wave voltage into the system. - this gives direct calibration of discharge amplitude - takes into account the response of the amplifier. Experience enables an operator to distinguish between several types of discharge from the nature of the output of the amplifier which is displayed on a C.R.O. having an elliptical time base. This time base is produced from a phase-shifting R.C. network. ♦ Essential requirements for this type of measurement - discharge-free voltage supplies, mains filters. - At low energies of discharge, screened rooms are essential. - Any transformer is discharge-free up to half its rated voltage. ∴ Failures by tracking and discharges are not an essential hazard in electrical life. Proper design, manufacture, correct choice of materials will prevent this.