Corona discharge and arcing around wires under the influence of high electric fields

An Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) resulting from, for example, the detonation of a nuclear weapon is characterised by a wave of electromagnetic activity able to couple with power lines and electro-sensitive equipment with the potential of rendering an establishment or on a greater scale, a whole city i...

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Main Author: Evans, John Lee
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52118/
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author Evans, John Lee
author_facet Evans, John Lee
author_sort Evans, John Lee
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description An Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) resulting from, for example, the detonation of a nuclear weapon is characterised by a wave of electromagnetic activity able to couple with power lines and electro-sensitive equipment with the potential of rendering an establishment or on a greater scale, a whole city impotent. Protection against such occurrences is of paramount importance. It is now accepted that an important consideration when devising protective schemes against such phenomena is an accurate understanding of the effects on propagating waveforms such as those coupled to wires, when electrical breakdown of the dielectric material surrounding such wires occurs, otherwise known as electrical discharge. Such issues can occur around the affected wires if the electric fields generated exceed the dielectric strength of the surrounding medium, typically air or soil. Under these circumstances, the signature of the coupled waveform is known to change in characteristic ways. The form and degree of distortion needs to be understood if the harmful effects are to be prevented by protection systems put in place. The purpose of this thesis is to first describe the mechanisms that lead to the development of the Nuclear–Electromagnetic Pulse (NEMP) and the mechanisms of the discharge that can result once such pulses have coupled to a wire. Next, some of the previous corona-modelling approaches are discussed. Many of the modelling approaches have been applied to 1-D transmission-line simulations. When 3-D simulations have been performed, the Finite-Difference (Time Domain) or FD-TD approach seems to be the preferred method. At the time of writing, no 3-D Transmission Line simulations of discharge phenomena around wires were available. Hence, here, the 3-D Transmission Line Modelling Method (TLM) is described with a view to modelling such behaviour. In particular, the Embedded-Wire-Node (EWN) is used to model the discharge development around the wire. This is a fine-wire technique used to reduce computational fatigue. The node can be adapted to accept changes related to electrical discharge allowing for a real-time, self-consistent recreation of such effects. The 3-D TLM approach proves to be a decent candidate to the modelling of such behaviour. Both advantages and disadvantages of this method are discussed.
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spelling nottingham-521182025-02-28T12:05:25Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52118/ Corona discharge and arcing around wires under the influence of high electric fields Evans, John Lee An Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) resulting from, for example, the detonation of a nuclear weapon is characterised by a wave of electromagnetic activity able to couple with power lines and electro-sensitive equipment with the potential of rendering an establishment or on a greater scale, a whole city impotent. Protection against such occurrences is of paramount importance. It is now accepted that an important consideration when devising protective schemes against such phenomena is an accurate understanding of the effects on propagating waveforms such as those coupled to wires, when electrical breakdown of the dielectric material surrounding such wires occurs, otherwise known as electrical discharge. Such issues can occur around the affected wires if the electric fields generated exceed the dielectric strength of the surrounding medium, typically air or soil. Under these circumstances, the signature of the coupled waveform is known to change in characteristic ways. The form and degree of distortion needs to be understood if the harmful effects are to be prevented by protection systems put in place. The purpose of this thesis is to first describe the mechanisms that lead to the development of the Nuclear–Electromagnetic Pulse (NEMP) and the mechanisms of the discharge that can result once such pulses have coupled to a wire. Next, some of the previous corona-modelling approaches are discussed. Many of the modelling approaches have been applied to 1-D transmission-line simulations. When 3-D simulations have been performed, the Finite-Difference (Time Domain) or FD-TD approach seems to be the preferred method. At the time of writing, no 3-D Transmission Line simulations of discharge phenomena around wires were available. Hence, here, the 3-D Transmission Line Modelling Method (TLM) is described with a view to modelling such behaviour. In particular, the Embedded-Wire-Node (EWN) is used to model the discharge development around the wire. This is a fine-wire technique used to reduce computational fatigue. The node can be adapted to accept changes related to electrical discharge allowing for a real-time, self-consistent recreation of such effects. The 3-D TLM approach proves to be a decent candidate to the modelling of such behaviour. Both advantages and disadvantages of this method are discussed. 2018-07-13 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52118/1/Thesis_final.pdf Evans, John Lee (2018) Corona discharge and arcing around wires under the influence of high electric fields. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Corona discharge Dielectric breakdown TLM simulation Electromagnetic Pulse signal propagation.
spellingShingle Corona discharge
Dielectric breakdown
TLM simulation
Electromagnetic Pulse
signal propagation.
Evans, John Lee
Corona discharge and arcing around wires under the influence of high electric fields
title Corona discharge and arcing around wires under the influence of high electric fields
title_full Corona discharge and arcing around wires under the influence of high electric fields
title_fullStr Corona discharge and arcing around wires under the influence of high electric fields
title_full_unstemmed Corona discharge and arcing around wires under the influence of high electric fields
title_short Corona discharge and arcing around wires under the influence of high electric fields
title_sort corona discharge and arcing around wires under the influence of high electric fields
topic Corona discharge
Dielectric breakdown
TLM simulation
Electromagnetic Pulse
signal propagation.
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52118/