TY - JOUR
T1 - Breakdown Characteristics of Rod-Plane Gap in an Ethanol Flame
AU - Wang, Zhenhua
AU - Shui, Kai
AU - Huangfu, Wenhao
AU - Zhao, Yaopeng
AU - Chen, Siyi
AU - You, Fei
AU - Zhang, Yun
AU - Jiang, Juncheng
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 1994-2012 IEEE.
PY - 2022/2/1
Y1 - 2022/2/1
N2 - The wildfires nearby high-voltage transmission lines are frequently reported to induce outages in many countries. Less research addresses the role played by individual characteristic factor (i.e., high temperature, intense heat, etc.) of wildfires in triggering phase-to-ground flashovers of transmission lines. Aiming at this, systematic laboratory experiments are performed to reveal the breakdown characteristics of rod-(ring-like) plane gap in clean ethanol flames. By setting different scenarios of pure air gap, nonbridged and bridged gaps by ethanol flames, the breakdown voltage, average breakdown strength, and leakage current with various gap spacings are measured and analyzed. Results show that the flame centerline positions at a height of 4.0-6.0 cm are regarded as the main reaction zone. The breakdown processes of rod-plane gaps in ethanol flames are the combined results of diverse discharge patterns. Compared with the pure air case, the breakdown voltages are decreased by 27.8%-70.5% in the nonbridged gap and by 68.3%-77.1% in the bridged gap by ethanol flames, and their corresponding levels of average breakdown strengths decrease to 45.7% and 27.6%, respectively. Under the alternating current (ac) electric field, the coupled effects of electric field force, thermal buoyancy, and ionic wind together promote the formations of streamer channels in ethanol flames. Finally, the high-temperature flame itself is found to be the most dominant factor in influencing the breakdown.
AB - The wildfires nearby high-voltage transmission lines are frequently reported to induce outages in many countries. Less research addresses the role played by individual characteristic factor (i.e., high temperature, intense heat, etc.) of wildfires in triggering phase-to-ground flashovers of transmission lines. Aiming at this, systematic laboratory experiments are performed to reveal the breakdown characteristics of rod-(ring-like) plane gap in clean ethanol flames. By setting different scenarios of pure air gap, nonbridged and bridged gaps by ethanol flames, the breakdown voltage, average breakdown strength, and leakage current with various gap spacings are measured and analyzed. Results show that the flame centerline positions at a height of 4.0-6.0 cm are regarded as the main reaction zone. The breakdown processes of rod-plane gaps in ethanol flames are the combined results of diverse discharge patterns. Compared with the pure air case, the breakdown voltages are decreased by 27.8%-70.5% in the nonbridged gap and by 68.3%-77.1% in the bridged gap by ethanol flames, and their corresponding levels of average breakdown strengths decrease to 45.7% and 27.6%, respectively. Under the alternating current (ac) electric field, the coupled effects of electric field force, thermal buoyancy, and ionic wind together promote the formations of streamer channels in ethanol flames. Finally, the high-temperature flame itself is found to be the most dominant factor in influencing the breakdown.
KW - Average breakdown strength
KW - breakdown voltage
KW - ethanol diffusion flame
KW - high-voltage transmission line
KW - ionic wind effect
KW - leakage current
KW - rod-plane electrode
KW - wildfire
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85124750283&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/TDEI.2022.3146541
DO - 10.1109/TDEI.2022.3146541
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85124750283
SN - 1070-9878
VL - 29
SP - 206
EP - 214
JO - IEEE Transactions on Dielectrics and Electrical Insulation
JF - IEEE Transactions on Dielectrics and Electrical Insulation
IS - 1
ER -