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A Repetitive Rate Pulse System Used in Lifetime Evaluation of High Voltage Ceramic Capacitors Jiaqi Yan, Le Cheng, Siyu Zhang, Yanan Wang, Yang Gou, Weidong Ding State Key Laboratory of Electrical Insulation and Power Equipment Xi’an Jiaotong University Xi’an, China [email protected] Abstract—The lifetime evaluation of High Voltage Ceramic Capacitors (short as HVCC), especially the ones working under repetitive pulses, is of great importance to the overall stability of pulsed power system. However relevant studies concerning the properties of HVCC under the conditions of repetitive rate pulse were rare to see. In order to realize the lifetime testing for HVCC, a high voltage, high current repetitive pulsed power system was developed and tested. This system consists of a repetitive pulsed power supply and a short-circuit testing cavity, whose repetition frequency and output voltage can be regulated easily. With this system, the lifetime test for HVCC was conducted, and the lifetime characteristics at different voltage levels under 25 Hz repetitive rate pulse and two kinds of failure modes were studied. Based on the experimental results, several measures were taken to improve the performance of HVCC. The lifetime was extended greatly from thousands of times to more than 105 times. The designed system and experimental results have great significance for the extensive application field of pulsed power technology, which would provide support for future researches. Keywords—repetitive pulse system; high voltage ceramic capacitor; lifetime; magnetic pulse compression network II. REPETITIVE RATE PULSE GENERATOR A. Pulse Forming Network The repetitive rate pulse supply used is based on the high power pulse forming technology with the magnetic pulse compressor being the core. The supply is composed of a primary oscillator circuit, a two-stage magnetic pulse compression network and two HV pulse transformers. For high voltage pulse output, the rise time is ~10μs and the amplitude is more than 70kV with the highest repetition frequency up to 25Hz. The principle circuit is shown in Fig. 1, where C0, C1, C2 are energy storage capacitors, L is the charging inductance, MS1 and MS2 are magnetic switches, PT1 and PT2 are pulse transformers and C is the experiment sample. In order to prevent flashover, PT2 and the sample are soaked in transformer oil. I. INTRODUCTION In the fields of long-pulse electron beams and high power microwaves generation, HVCC are widely used in pulse forming net (PFN) and have large application field due to its great performance of relatively high dielectric constant and low inductance. The failure mechanism of HVCC under repetitive rate pulses is rather complicated. The properties of ceramics are the primary element which determine the operation status and lifetime of HVCC. The structure of ceramic chips and the thickness of epoxy coating will influence the heat and stress distribution on HVCC. The electric field strength will affect the aging process through partial discharge and energy loss. The combination of various elements will finally determine the lifetime of HVCC under repetitive rate pulses. In this paper, a repetitive rate pulse system used in lifetime evaluation of HVCC is built[1-3]. The elaborately designed short-circuit testing cavity was very compact in which SF6 gas can be charged more than 1.0MPa. A Rogowski coil is integrated into the cavity. The short circuit current is up to 20kA with the 2.5nF capacitive load. Circuit components are elaborately selected and parameters are carefully matched. This repetitive microsecond pulsed power system is integrated and installed in a portable box which can realize the scale-up production[4-6]. Fig. 1. The circuit diagram of repetitive rate pulse supply. In Fig.1, a DC voltage with certain amplitude will be obtained by a regulator and a full-bridge rectifying circuit to charge C0. When IGBT is turned on, the primary energy storage capacitor C0 will charge the secondary energy storage capacitor C1 by L. Right now, the magnetic switch MS1 is not saturated. The extremely large impedance makes it equivalent to a breaking circuit. During the charging period of C1, MS1 starts to undertake certain voltage. When the product of the voltage and time has achieved its voltage second product, MS1 is turned on. C1 will discharge on the primary side of PT1, which would result in a pulse signal with the amplitude of several hundred volts and the rising time of several microseconds. While C1 discharge on the primary side of PT1, the induced voltage at the secondary side of PT1 will charge on C2. When the product of the voltage and time has achieved the voltage second product, MS2 will turn on, which will lead to discharge of C2 to the primary side of PT2. By the stepping up effect of PT2, a pulse voltage with higher amplitude and shorter rising time will be obtained on C, which is the secondary side of PT2. When IGBT is turned off, C0’s charging process on C1 will stop. The energy will be stored on C0. The voltage applied on C will be nearly 0.When the IGBT is repetitively turned on and off, the repetitive rate pulse voltage is formed. The repetition frequency will be determined by the times of turning on the IGBT in unit time. B. The determination of the capacitors’ parameters While designing the magnetic pulse compressor network, the equivalent capacitance at each level should be nearly the same in order to achieve higher efficiency. Therefore, the capacitance of each storage capacitor is relevant to the capacitance of the sample. The capacitance of the sample used is nearly 5nF. The ratio of PT1 is 18 while the ratio of PT2 is 8. Through the conversion of impedances, the following equations could be analyzed. C2 =n2C 82 5 320nF (1) C1 =n C2 18 0.4 129F (2) 2 2 In order to improve the amplitude of voltage on C1 and decrease the load on pulse transformers, the capacitance of C1 should be greatly lower than C0. Therefore, the capacitance of C0 is chosen as 4mF. The voltage after being processed by the regulator is nearly 220V. And the voltage after the full-bridge rectifying circuit is nearly 310V. Thus C0 is chosen as a electrolytic capacitor with the DC withstand voltage as 450V. By simulating the charging process of C0 to C1, it could be known that the maximum voltage value on C1 is nearly 500V. Considering the energy loss, voltage margin and the actual parameters, the capacitance of C1 is 150μF and the rated voltage is 1200V. The capacitance of C2 is 400nF and the rated voltage is 20kV. C. The parameters of the primary oscillation circuit The full-bridge rectifying model selected is MDS100, with the reverse withstanding voltage as 600V and could undertake a power frequency current as high as 100A. The current and charging time should be determined by L, C1 and C0. In order to prevent the damage to components caused by large primary current, the charging time is 300μs. From the following equation, L is calculated to be 63μH. T = LC1C0 / (C1 C0 ) (3) The IGBT used is CM300DY-24A. The collector current is 300A. The withstand voltage is 1200V. The on and off of IGBT is controlled by the signal from a single-chip through a drive circuit and protection circuit. D. Pulse compressor network and pulse transformer The magnetic pulse compressor network achieves the magnetic compression by controlling the voltage second product of the magnetic switches. The magnetic switches are non-linear saturation reactors, which are composed of a magnetic core and coils bound to the core. By taking advantage of the non-linearity, the switching could be achieved by the quick decrease of inductance after the saturation. When the parameters of magnetic switches are selected appropriately, the latter rising time will be shorter than the former one, which could realize the goal of compression. The center issue of the design of magnetic pulse compression network is the determination of the voltage second product, which is described as followed. T 0.5UT udt N BS (4) 0 However, the voltage second product is related to the working conditions, for instance, the voltage waveform and the power frequency. It is hard to measure precisely. Therefore, the parameters designed could only be as reference. The actual parameters should be adjusted based on actual operation conditions during the construction of the platform. The magnetic core should be U-shaped silicon steel sheet with high saturation flux density and satisfactory low frequency properties. From the static magnetic hysteresis loop of the silicon steel sheet, B 1.7T . The measured crosssection area of magnetic circuit S 1.35 103 m2 . Since the charging time of C1 is 200μs and the maximum amplitude value of U1 is 500V, the turns of MS1 is calculated to be 22, according to the voltage second product equation. In actual situation, the voltage waveform measured on C1 after paralleling C1 to the primary oscillation circuit is shown in Fig. 2. The voltage value is 496V. The rising time is 222μs. The turns determined from the voltage second equation is 25. Fig. 2 The voltage waveform on C1. After connecting the magnetic switch MS1, the voltage decreased to 316V and rising time decreased to 54μs. According to calculation, the number of turns at the primary side of PT1 is 2. The designed ratio is 18. In ideal situation, the turns of PT1 should be 2/36. In actual conditions, the maximum output voltage value was obtained when the turns were 4/96. The maximum voltage value on C2 is 8.4kV. The rising time is 18μs, as shown in Fig. 3. inductance of the arc is determined by the length of gap. The inductance of the copper bar is determined by its size and distance. The length of copper bar is 8.2cm. The width is 4.04cm. The thickness is 0.01cm. The diameter of the copper sphere is 2cm. The gap distance and the distance between the copper bars are determined by the experiment voltage. When the gap distance is 2 cm, the inductance of the circuit could be estimated as followed. The inductance of the metal strip is shown in (5). L =4l (ln Fig. 3 The voltage waveform on C2. According to the waveform shown in Fig. 3, the turns of MS2 is calculated to be 33. By adopting the same testing method, the maximum efficiency of power supply could be obtained when the turns of PT2 is 9/75. When C=2.5nF, the voltage waveform on C is shown in Fig. 4. The voltage value is 77.3kV. The rising time is 15μs. For better insulation, PT2 is positioned in transformer oil. d d bc 1.5 0.2235 ) 41.7 nH bc l l (5) The inductance of a 2 cm long arc is shown in (6). L 14s 28nH (6) By adding the inductances together and taking the estimation error into account, the whole inductance is about several hundred nH. The resistance in the circuit is mainly caused by the arc, which is relatively small. Therefore, the discharge period is determined by the inductances and capacitance, as shown in (7). T =2 LC (7) By testing the discharge period, the value of inductance could be obtained, as shown in Fig. 5. When the capacitance of HVCC is 2.5nF and the gap distance is 1.87cm, the discharge period is nearly 100ns. The inductance of the discharge circuit is 101nH. Fig. 4 The voltage waveform on C. III. SHORT-CIRCUIT TESTING CAVITY By using the discharge circuit as shown in Fig. 1, the discharge current is rather small, the discharge period is at the scale of microseconds and no sparks are observed due to the large inductance at the secondary side of the pulse transformer. No obvious heating effect is observed at the discharge circuit through the infrared thermal imager, which is beneficial to the precise measurement of temperature rise of HVCC after the experiment. However, concerning certain applications of repetitive rate pulse power technology, for instance, high power microwave, a compact discharge circuit, a low inductance of discharge circuit, a short discharge period and the ability to withstand extremely high discharge current are required. In order to simulate these actual working conditions, another type of discharge circuit is designed. The structure of B type discharge circuit is rather compact. The inductance is rather small. However, the repetitive breakdown of the air gap between copper spheres under repetitive rate pulse voltage will cause arc, which may further result in strong light and large amount of heat. This would interfere the temperature observation of the infrared thermal imager. In addition, the heat of arc would be transmitted to oil and HVCC through air and copper bars, which may influence the temperature distribution. The research on the thickness of coating and the electric field strength mainly concentrate on the lifetime and change of capacitance. The temperature rise doesn’t need to be measured precisely since it is only used to judge the operation status of HVCC. Therefore, type B is adopted. In the experiment, the gap distance should be adjusted according to the environment conditions, which may guarantee a breakdown when the voltage is elevated to the designed value. In this type of discharge circuit, the gap between bronze spheres is paralleled to HVCC sample by copper bar. When the voltage on HVCC is higher than breakdown voltage of the air gap, the gap is broken down, which assists in HVCC’s shortcircuit discharge through the gap. The inductance of the discharge circuit is composed of the inductance of the HVCC, the copper bar and the arc. The inductance of the HVCC sample is nearly 15nH. The Fig. 5 Type B: another type of discharge circuit of HVCC. IV. OPERATION The signals that need to be monitored during the lifetime experiment are the temperature of the sample, the voltage waveform applied on the sample, the capacitance of the sample and its loss factor. Through analyzing these parameters, the sample could be determined its failure. The voltage waveform and temperature signal are monitored online. The pulse voltage produced by the repetitive rate supply is monitored offline through the voltage divider and the high voltage sensor. The heating phenomenon is measured by the infrared thermal imager. The capacitance and loss factor are measured offline by a LCR. The resistance is measured by a megameter. The criteria for failure is the basis of a lifetime experiment. The failure of HVCC is accompanied by the defects on the appearance and the change of electrical parameters. Since the whole sample is placed in transformer oil, when there are obvious defects appearing, for instance, the cracking of epoxy coating and the falling off of copper electrode, the HVCC could be determined as failed. The change of electrical parameters will influences the voltage waveform and the temperature of the sample. In specific, the change of capacitance would result in a change of voltage waveform applied on the sample. The obvious increase of loss factor and decrease of resistance will bring about the abnormal heating of the sample. When there are abnormal phenomenon appearing and a sharp increase of temperature, the sample could be determined as failed. The measurement of the electrical parameters should be suspended. When the capacitance changes over 20%, or the loss factor is higher than 1% or the resistance is lower than 1000MΩ, the sample should be determined as failed. TABLE I. The Group of Sample A B C D LIFETIME RESULT OF SAMPLES The preliminary lifetime experiment of HVCC has been carried out and the results are shown in the tableⅠ. Samples of different groups have different improved aspects. According to the table, different improved measures influenced the lifetime significantly. In the future, more detailed and comprehensive researches will be carried out. Several measures, like coating semiconductor at the edge of silver layers, adding coupling agent to the ceramic-epoxy interface and improving the structure of brass terminals, were taken to improve the performance of HVCC. The effectiveness was observed and he lifetime was extended greatly from thousands of times to more than 105 times. V. SUMMERY With this platform, the accelerated lifetime test for HVCC was conducted. The investigation of the failure models would guide the manufacturing of HVCC, and the improvement would enhance their performance, which is very important to the reliability of pulsed power systems. Analyzing the factors that influence the lifetime of HVCC and studying the failing process could provide theoretical guidance for improving the properties of HVCC and its reliability, which may furthermore, be quite valuable for the improvement of high power repetitive rate pulsed power technology. REFERENCES [1] [2] [3] Lifetime (Number of Shots) A1 A2 A3 A4 51000 104250 45000 58500 B1 B2 B3 B4 B5 31250 27000 22500 9000 12375 C1 C2 C3 C4 C5 50 100 3500 250 9000 D1 D2 D3 D4 300 375 50 3500 A5 28250 B6 250 C6 9000 D5 3125 [4] [5] [6] B. Caballero, S. Luis and P. W. Smith, “Discrete pulse forming lines for a compact z-pinch pulsed power generator,” Pulsed Power Conference, 2007 16th IEEE International, Albuquerque, NM, vol. 1, 2007, pp. 546549. Young AL and Hilmas GE, “Mechanical vs. electrical failure mechanisms in high voltage, high energy density multilayer ceramic capacitors,” J. Mat. Sci., vol. 42, pp.5613-5619, 2007. J. Su, X. Zhang and G. Liu, “A long-pulse generator based on Tesla transformer and pulse-forming network,” IEEE Trans. Plasma Sci., vol. 37, pp. 1954-1958, 2009. T. Shao, D. Zhang, and Y. Yu, “A compact repetitive unipolar nanosecond-pulse generator for dielectric barrier discharge application,” IEEE Trans. Plasma Sci., vol. 38, pp.1651-1655, 2010. S. D. Korovin, I. K. Kurkan and S. V. Loginov, “Decimeter-band frequency-tunable sources of high-power microwave pulses,” Laser Part. Beams, vol. 21, pp.175-185, 2003. K. Oyamada, S. Konosu, and T. Ohno, “Electric field concentration in the vicinity of the interface between anode and degraded BaTiO3-based ceramics in multilayer ceramic capacitor,” Appl. Phys. Lett., vol. 98, art. no. 072905, 2011.