50 research outputs found
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Unified modelling of TIG microarcs with evaporation from copper anode
A previously developed unified model of a tungsten-inert gas (TIG) microarc has been extended to take into account the melting of the anode made of copper and the release of copper atoms due to its evaporation. The copper atoms enter the plasma to become excited and ionized. The presence of copper atoms and ions can strongly change the plasma parameters. The extended unified model further includes excited states of copper and collisional and radiative processes between them. Predictions of the parameters of the microarc plasma in the presence of copper species are presented and discussed
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Ablation-dominated arcs in CO2 atmosphere—Part II: Molecule emission and absorption
Molecule radiation can be used as a tool to study colder regions in switching arc plasmas like arc fringes in contact to walls and ranges around current zero (CZ). This is demonstrated in the present study for the first time for the case of ablation-dominated high-current arcs as key elements of self-blast circuit breakers. The arc in a model circuit breaker (MCB) in CO2 with and an arc in a long nozzle under ambient conditions with peak currents between 5 and 10 kA were studied by emission and absorption spectroscopy in the visible spectral range. The nozzle material was polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) in both cases. Imaging spectroscopy was carried out either with high-speed cameras or with intensified CCD cameras. A pulsed high-intensity Xe lamp was applied as a background radiator for the broad-band absorption spectroscopy. Emission of Swan bands from carbon dimers was observed at the edge of nozzles only or across the whole nozzle radius with highest intensity in the arc center, depending on current and nozzle geometry. Furthermore, absorption of C2 Swan bands and CuF bands were found with the arc plasma serving as background radiator. After CZ, only CuF was detected in absorption experiments. © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland
Unified modelling of TIG microarcs with evaporation from copper anode
A previously developed unified model of a tungsten-inert gas (TIG) microarc has been extended to take into account the melting of the anode made of copper and the release of copper atoms due to its evaporation. The copper atoms enter the plasma to become excited and ionized. The presence of copper atoms and ions can strongly change the plasma parameters. The extended unified model further includes excited states of copper and collisional and radiative processes between them. Predictions of the parameters of the microarc plasma in the presence of copper species are presented and discussed
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Electrical Modelling of Switching Arcs in a Low Voltage Relay at Low Currents
The arc behaviour of short, low current switching arcs is not well understood and lacks a reliable model. In this work, the behaviour of an arc in the air is studied during contact separation at low DC currents (0.5 A to 20 A) and for small gap lengths (0 mm to 6 mm). The experiments are performed on a low voltage relay with two different electrode configurations. The arc voltage is measured during the opening of the contacts at constant current. The arc length is determined optically by tracing the mean path of the arc over time from a series of high-speed images. From the synchronised data of voltage vs. distance, first a sudden jump of the voltage at the start of contact opening is observed. Secondly, a sudden change in the voltage gradient occurs as the arc is elongated. Short arcs with a length up to approximately 1.25 mm show an intense radiation in the overall gap region and high voltage gradients. An unexpected behaviour never reported before was observed for longer arcs at low current: Two characteristic regions occur, a region in front of the cathode, with a length of approximately 1.25 mm, having an intense radiation and a high voltage gradient as well as a region of much lower radiation intensity and a comparatively lower voltage gradient in the remaining gap area despite a small anode spot region. The characteristic border of approximately 1.25 mm is almost independent of the current. A generalised arc voltage model is proposed based on the assumption that a constant sheath voltage and two discrete field regions exist, which are modelled as two independent linear functions of voltage vs. length. The data for various currents is combined to yield a general non-linear function for predicting the arc voltage vs. arc length and current
Electrical and Optical Investigation of an Electric Arc in Hydrogen for short gaps
Hydrogen or mixtures containing hydrogen represent attractive gases for low-voltage switching devices because of increased arc quenching behaviour. However, fundamental electrical properties of arcs in hydrogen are still not well known. In this paper, first results of a study of a DC switching arc in pure hydrogen at 1 bar between graphite electrodes are presented for low currents of 8 and 16 A. The arc voltage and current are measured during contact separation. High-speed images of the arc are processed to determine the arc length considering the high arc dynamics with erratic elongations and jumps of the electrode attachment. The arc voltage dependence on the length results in a typical sheath voltage of approximately 23 V and mean electric fields in the arc column of 18.7 V/mm at 8 A and 10.8 V/mm at 16A
Numerical investigation of transient, low-power metal vapour discharges occurring in near limit ignitions of flammable gas
This article presents an investigation of a transient (30 {\mu}s - 5 ms)
electrical discharge in metal vapour with low voltage (< 50 V) and current (< 1
A), drawn between two separating electrodes. Discharges of this type are rarely
studied, but are important in electrical explosion safety, as they can ignite
flammable gasses. An empirical model is developed based on transient recordings
of discharge voltages and currents and high speed broadband image data. The
model is used for predicting the electrical waveforms and spatial power
distribution of the discharge. The predicted electrical waveforms show good
accuracy under various scenarios. To further investigate the underlying
physics, the model is then incorporated into a simplified 3-D gas dynamics
simulation including molecular diffusion, heat transfer and evaporation of
metal from the electrode surface. The local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE)
assumption is next used to calculate electrical conductivity from the simulated
temperature fields, which in turn is integrated to produce electrical
resistance over time. This resistance is then compared to that implied by the
voltage and current waveforms predicted by the empirical model. The comparison
shows a significant discrepancy, yielding the important insight that the
studied discharge very likely deviates strongly from LTE
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Plasma parameters of microarcs towards minuscule discharge gap
This paper describes the behaviour of the plasma parameters of microarcs generated between a cooled copper anode and a ceriated tungsten cathode by means of a one-dimensional unified non-equilibrium model for gap lengths between 15 and 200 μm and current densities from 2 × 105 up to 106 A/m2. The results obtained show that the decrease of the gap length to a few tens of micrometres for a given current density results in a progressive shrinking of the quasi-neutral bulk in the microplasma and its complete disappearance. The decrease of the gap length further leads to an increase of the discharge voltage and the electron temperature and to slightly less heating of the gas. © 2020 The Authors. Contributions to Plasma Physics Published by Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGa
Optical Emission Spectroscopy of Cadmium Dominated Discharges Applied for Assessment of Explosion Protection
An assessment for the safe use of electrical equipment in explosive atmospheres can be performed with the aid of a spark test apparatus. Therefore, an anodic tungsten wire with 200 µm diameter is moved along the surface of a rotating cadmium disc (cathode). The explosion chamber enclosing the electrodes is filled with a highly explosive mixture of hydrogen and air. Depending on surface topology and relative movement of the contact pair, discharges occur randomly. A model contact device is used to investigate the plasma properties and the discharge characteristics near the thermo-chemical ignition threshold of the explosive atmosphere that typically occur at voltages around 30V and currents around 30mA.Spectroscopic investigations reveal that the emission of the discharges is dominated by atomic lines of cadmium, which allow the determination of distribution temperatures
Complementary Experimental and Simulation-based Characterization of Transient Arcs
Electric arcs generated by transient lightning-type surge currents in protection devices for low voltage appliances are studied by optical emission spectroscopy and spectra simulations. A surge pulse amplitude of 5kA and 8/20µs shape are applied. The arc radiation is recorded by a 3/4m spectrometer and a high-speed camera equipped with metal interference filters for the O I (777nm) and Hα (656nm) lines. Absolute calibration was realized using a tungsten strip lamp. The arc images indicate a non-symmetrical shape. To determine the plasma properties, accompanying simulation solving the equation of radiative transfer for a given pressure and a temperature profile was carried out assuming local thermodynamic equilibrium. Line broadening due to the Stark effect is taken into account. The computed and measured spectra are compared. The conditions are varied until the measured and computed spectra match