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INTRODUCTION TO
ELECTROSTATIC FIELD
STRESS CONTROL
What is High Voltage?
l Introduction
l ElectricField Stress
l Gas/vacuum Insulation
l Liquid Dielectrics
l Solid Dielectrics
l Estimation and Control of Electric Stress
Introduction
l In modern time, high voltages are used for a wide
variety of applications covering the power systems,
industry and research laboratories.
l High voltage apparatus is used necessitate careful
design of its insulation and the electrostatic field
profiles.
l The principal media of insulation used are gases,
vacuum, solid, liquid or a combination of these.
l For achieving reliability and economy, a knowledge of
the causes of deterioration is essential and the
tendency to increase the voltage stress for optimum
design calls for judicious selection of insulation in
relation to the dielectric strength, corona discharges
and other relevant factors.
Electric Field Stress
l In high voltage applications, the dielectric
strength of insulating materials and the electric
field stresses developed in them when
subjected to high voltages are the important
factors in high voltage systems.
l In a high voltage apparatus the important
materials used are conductors and insulators.
l While the conductors carry the current, the
insulators prevent the flow of currents in
undesired paths.
Cont…
l The electric stress to which an insulating material is
subjected to is numerically equal to the voltage
gradient, and is equal to the electric field intensity.
l E : electric field intensity
l φ : applied voltage
: operator (defined as
∆
l
∂ ∂ ∂
∇ = ax + a y + az
∂x ∂y ∂z
l Where ax, ay and az are components of position vector
r = axx + ayy + azz
Cont…
l The most important material used in a high
voltage apparatus is the insulation.
l The dielectric strength of an insulating material
can be defined as the maximum dielectric
stress which the material can withstand.
l The electric breakdown strength of insulating
materials depends on pressure, temperature,
humidity, field configurations, nature of applied
voltage, imperfections in dielectric materials,
material of electrodes, surface condition of
electrodes, etc.
Cont…
l The most common cause of insulation failure
is the presence of discharges either within the
voids in the insulation or over the surface of
the insulation.
l The probability of failure will be greatly
reduced if such discharges could be eliminated
at the normal working voltage.
l Then, failure can occur as a result of thermal
or electrochemical deterioration of the
insulation.
Gas/Vacuum Insulation
l Air at atmospheric pressure is the most common
gaseous insulation.
l Breakdown occurs in gases due to the process of
collisional ionization.
l Practical insulating gases used are carbon dioxide
(CO2), dichlorodifluoromethane (CCl2F2) (freon),
sulphur hexafluoride (SF6) and nitrogen (N2).
l SF6 has been found to maintain its insulation
superiority compared to any other gases.
l Ideally, vacuum is the best insulator with field
strengths up to 107 V/cm.
Cont…
2 ρ
∇ ϕ=−
ε0
l φ : potential
l ρ : discharge density
l ε 0 : vacuum permittivity
Cont…
l Figure 1.1 shows the methods of stress control at an
electrode edge. In the design of hv apparatus, the
electric field intensities have to be controlled,
otherwise higher stresses will trigger or accelerate the
aging of the insulation.
Cont…