Numerical simulation of cathode directed streamer discharges in Air and CO<sub>2</sub>.
ORAL
Abstract
Dielectric breakdown characterization in CO2 has become as important as that of SF6 gas in high voltage engineering. This is as a result of the urgent need for replacement of SF6 gas due to its high GWP. The first stage of breakdown in gases is the streamer discharge which occurs when a gas is suddenly exposed to a high voltage. Modeling streamer discharges numerically is needed to predict intrinsic characteristics of gases such as SF6 and CO2, which further allows for an accurate comparison of their dielectric performances.
We used a plasma fluid model implementation in COMSOL® Multiphysics to study streamer discharges in air gaps of 5 mm with a point to plane geometry. Restriction on gap length was due to long simulation times stemming from limited computational capacity. To overcome this, the plasma fluid model code, Afivo-streamer (https://gitlab.com/MD-CWI-NL/afivo-streamer) was used to study streamers in relatively longer gaps (>10 mm) in air and CO2. We compared the two implementations and studied the influence of pressure on the discharges. This is of industrial importance especially for equipment manufacturers. We analyzed the relation between the streamer velocity and diameter with increasing pressure and compared the results with in-house experiments and earlier literature.
Index terms: Numerical Modelling, Streamer Discharges, Plasma Fluid Model
We used a plasma fluid model implementation in COMSOL® Multiphysics to study streamer discharges in air gaps of 5 mm with a point to plane geometry. Restriction on gap length was due to long simulation times stemming from limited computational capacity. To overcome this, the plasma fluid model code, Afivo-streamer (https://gitlab.com/MD-CWI-NL/afivo-streamer) was used to study streamers in relatively longer gaps (>10 mm) in air and CO2. We compared the two implementations and studied the influence of pressure on the discharges. This is of industrial importance especially for equipment manufacturers. We analyzed the relation between the streamer velocity and diameter with increasing pressure and compared the results with in-house experiments and earlier literature.
Index terms: Numerical Modelling, Streamer Discharges, Plasma Fluid Model
*This work has been supported by the French National Research Agency in the framework of the “Investissements d’avenir” program (ANR-15-IDEX-02).The authors would also like to express appreciation to the eit InnoEnergy PhD school for supporting a collaboration between the two laboratories.
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Presenters
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Francis Boakye-Mensah
- Univ. Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, Grenoble INP*, G2Elab, Grenoble, 38031 France
- Univ. Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, Grenoble INP*, G2Elab, Grenoble, 38031, France