2,516,129 research outputs found

    Influence of ac ageing on space charge dynamics in LDPE

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    Polymeric materials have been widely used as insulation in power industry due to their excellent electrical properties. However, these properties deteriorate in time irreversibly when the material is subjected to electric stress. Although space charge is believed to play an important role in ac ageing, exact mechanisms are poorly understood due to very limited experimental data. In the present work efforts have been made to investigate the influence of ac ageing on space charge dynamics in low-density polyethylene (LDPE). LDPE films with 200mm were aged at 50 kV/mm at 50 Hz for various times at ambient temperature. Space charge dynamics in the samples prior to and after ageing were monitored using the pulsed electroacoustic (PEA) technique under dc electric stress. The results indicate that there is a significant amount of homocharge accumulation in the unaged sample due to charge injection. These injected charges are the captured by the deep traps originated from the interface between crystalline and amorphous regions in LDPE. Ageing under ac condition does not necessarily lead to an increase in amount of charge in the bulk but leads to an increase in mobility of charge carriers. Chemical analysis by infrared spectroscope (FTIR) reveals there are chemical changes taken place in the bulk of the material after ac ageing. It is believed that the chemical changes introduce shallow traps which promote the movement of charge carriers in the bulk. Consequently, the injected charges spread across the sample

    Space charge behavior in multi-layer oil-paper insulation under different DC voltages and temperatures

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    Oil-paper as a reliable insulation system is widely used in power transformers and cables. The dielectric properties of oil-paper insulation play an important role in the reliable operation of power equipment. However, the formation and dynamics of space charge can affect the performance of insulation material. In this paper, space charge in oil-paper insulation system has been investigated using the pulsed electroacoustic (PEA) technique. A series of measurements were carried out when the insulation system was subjected to different applied voltages at different temperatures. Charge behavior in the insulation system has been analyzed and the influence of temperature on charge dynamics was discussed. The test results show that homocharge injection takes place under all the test conditions, the applied dc voltage mainly effect the amount of space charge, while the temperature has greater influence on the distribution and mobility of space charge inside oil-paper sample

    Space charge and charge trapping characteristics of cross-linked polyethylene subjected to ac electric stresses

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    This paper reports on the result of space charge evolution in cross-linked polyethylene (XLPE) planar samples of approximately 220 ?m thick. The space charge measurement technique used in this study is the PEA method. There are two phases to this experiment. In the first phase, the samples were subjected to dc 30 kVdc/mm and ac (sinusoidal) electric stress level of 30 kVpk/mm at frequencies of 1 Hz, 10 Hz and 50 Hz ac. In addition, ac space charge under 30 kVrms/mm and 60 kVpk/mm electric stress at 50 Hz was also investigated. The volts off results showed that the amount of charge trapped in XLPE sample under dc electric stress is significantly bigger than samples under ac stress even when the applied ac stresses are substantially higher. The second phase of the experiment involves studying the dc space charge evolution in samples that were tested under ac stress during the first phase of the experiment. Ac ageing causes positive charge to become more dominant over negative charge. It was also discovered that ac ageing creates deeper traps, particularly for negative charge. This paper also gave a brief overview of the data processing methods used to analyse space charge under ac electric stress

    Dynamics of space charge and electroluminescence modelling in polyethylene

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    Space charge has been recognized as an important factor contributing to the electrical failure of the cable insulation. Extensive efforts have been made to investigate space charge dynamics within polymeric insulations under electric stresses. Basic information about space charge has been recognized resorting to modern charge mapping techniques but the underlying mechanisms for charge transport, charge trapping characteristics are not yet well understood. Hence theoretical modelling and numerical simulation are employed to simulate the space charge and provide an insight into the charge distribution in dielectrics. This thesis comprises the quantitative analysis of space charge through numerical modelling and experimental investigations of charge trapping in polymeric insulation materials.A bipolar charge transport model which involves bipolar charge injection from the electrodes, charge transport with trapping and recombination in the bulk has been developed to simulate the dynamics of space charge in polyethylene. The build-up of space charge in polyethylene under dc electric fields has been modelled. The influence of parameters related to the properties of polyethylene on the formation of space charge has been recognized. Furthermore, this model is introduced to simulate the dynamics of corona charge decay in polyethylene. The formation of charge packets in polyethylene is also investigated using a numerical modelling approach.A fast pulsed electro-acoustic system along with a data processing program has been developed to investigate the behaviour of space charge in polyethylene under ac voltages. The understanding of space charge under ac stresses has also been simulated using the further developed bipolar charge transport model. Experiments and simulation have also been expanded into understanding electroluminescence, which is an indication of pre-aging of polymers under ac stress

    Temperature effect on space charge dynamics in XLPE insulation

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    This paper reports on space charge evolution in crosslinked polyethylene (XLPE) planar samples approximately 1.20 mm thick subjected to electric stress level of 30 kVdc/mm under four temperature 25 oC, 50 oC, 70 oC and 90 oC for 24 hours. Space charge profiles in both as-received and degassed samples were measured using the laser induced pressure pulse (LIPP) technique. The dc threshold stresses at which space charge initiates are greatly affected by testing temperatures. The results suggest that testing temperature has numerous effects on space charge dynamics such as enhancement of ionic dissociation of polar crosslinked by-products, charge injection, charge mobility and electrical conductivity. Space charge distributions of very different nature were seen at lower temperatures when comparing the results of as-received samples with degassed samples. However at higher temperature, the space charge distribution took the same form, although of lower concentration in degassed samples. Space charge distributions are dominated by positive charge when tested at high temperatures regardless of sample treatment and positive charge propagation enhances as testing temperature increases. This can be a major cause of concern as positive charge propagation has been reported to be related to insulation breakdown

    Space charge measurement and analysis in low density polyethylene films

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    The growing requirement of reliability for an insulation system gives researchers greater responsibility to investigate new techniques for monitoring and diagnosing dielectrics subjected to an electric field. It is well known that the presence of space charge is one of the important factors causing premature failure of polymeric high voltage cables. Space charge surveillance is becoming the most general applied skill to evaluate polymeric materials, particularly high voltage cables. The well-known pulsed electroacoustic method (PEA), a reliable non-destructive method, gives a reasonable resolution to the concentration of the space charge in the insulation material. My work contributes to the measuring of space charge in low density polyethylene using PEA.From the experiments to study space charge formation and distribution at the interface on multi-layer sample under DC and AC applied voltage, electrode materials and frequency are determined as two important factors in measuring the charge injection and distribution; the interface between films acts as a trap for charge carriers, especially for electrons; and positive charge has a high mobility compared to negative charge.Surface potential decay was studied to explain the crossover phenomenon and to find physical mechanism on charge decay of the corona charged film sample. Charge mapping technique (PEA) was successfully introduced to the potential study and it provides an alternative way to investigate charge decay process and allows monitoring charge migration through the bulk of corona charged film. One essential phenomenon, bipolar charge injection, has been first derived from the results of space charge distribution.The advanced PEA measurement system with high rate test and excellent phase resolving capability was designed in the last part of the study. Compared with the old system the new system can provide the enhanced experiment result for fast change situation, which can achieve high-quality diagnosis for the virtual industry situation such as polarity reversal and transient voltage failure

    Space Charge Behaviour at LDPE Interface under AC Electric Stress

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    This paper reports on measurements of space charge characteristics in single and two-layer of low-density polyethylene (LDPE) films subjected to an applied voltage with a range of frequencies from dc to 50 Hz. Space charge was measured using the pulsed electroacoustic (PEA) technique. To measure charge distributions under ac electric fields at different angles, the point-on-wave method has been used. To obtain a good signal to noise ratio under ac conditions, the measured signals were averaged between 1000 and 2000 times. Experimental results demonstrated that frequency is a significant factor that affects bulk charge formation/distribution. In addition, interfacial charge between polymer and polymer in the two-layer arrangement was influenced by the type of electrode material

    Space Charge Behaviour in LDPE after AC Ageing

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    Space charge accumulation after ac ageing and its effect on dc poling has been studied in low-density polyethylene (LDPE). LDPE film samples with thickness of around 180mm were aged at an electric stress of 50kV/mm under 50 Hz ac voltage for various times at ambient temperature. Space charge dynamics in the samples after ageing were monitored using the pulsed electroacoustic (PEA) technique. Except the presence of considerable amount of space charge accumulation in the aged sample, the ageing has also brought a significant influence into the space dynamic under dc poling voltage. The ageing extent was previously investigated by chemical analysis (i.e. Fourier Transform Infrared FTIR and Raman spectrum) revealed little change taken place in the bulk of the material after ac ageing in the time frame studied. This indicates that the space charge measurement may be an effective method for diagnosing the early stage of material deterioration. It also provides additional information about charge mobility and trap depth that can be extracted from space charge profile

    Calibration of the Pulsed Electroacoustic Technique in the Presence of Trapped Charge

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    The influence of pulse voltage on the accuracy of charge density distribution in the pulsed electroacoustic technique (PEA) is discussed. It is shown that significant error can be introduced if a low dc voltage and high pulse voltage are used to calibrate charge density. However, our main focus in the present paper is to deal with one of the practical situations where space charge exists in the material prior to any measurements. The conventional calibration method can no longer be used to calibrate charge density due to the interference by the charge on the electrode induced by space charge. A method has been proposed which is based on two measurements. Firstly, the sample containing charge is measured without any applied voltage. The second measurement is carried out with a small external applied voltage. The applied voltage should be small enough so there is no disturbance of the existing charge in the sample. The difference of the two measurements can be used for calibration. An additional advantage of the proposed method avoids the influence of the pulse voltage on calibration and therefore gives a more accurate representation of space charge. The proposed method has been validated

    Space charge dynamics in low density polyethylene under dc electric fields

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    In this paper space charge dynamics in low-density polyethylene (LDPE) under different dc electric fields, ranging from 25 kV/mm to 125 kV/mm, have been investigated using the pulsed electroacoustic (PEA) technique. Bipolar space charges have been formed to present in the sample and the amount of charge increases with both the applied electric field and the duration of electric field applied. Double injection is believed to be responsible for the charge measured. Negative charge dominates due to electrode configuration used in the research. The formation of charge leads to an increase in the maximum electric field. Results show that the maximum electric field is both the applied field and time dependent. The charge decay after the removal of the applied field shows a fast decaying rate for the charge formed at high applied electric field
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