Breakdown in Pure and Commercial Liquids
Q. Explain the phenomenon of ‘ tracking in solid insulating materials under electrical stress. How it can be minimized.
- Pure Liquids Liquids which are chemically pure, structurally simple and do not contain any impurity even in traces of 1 in 109, are known as pure liquids. E.g. n-hexane (C4H14).
- In contrast, commercial liquids used as insulating liquids are chemically impure and contain mixtures of complex organic molecules.
- In fact their behaviour is quite erratic.
- No two samples of oil taken out from the same container will behave identically.
e.g. transformer oil
Pure |
Commercial |
Pure liquids are those which are chemically pure and don’t contain |
Commercial insulating liquids are not chemically pure and have |
The breakdown voltage depends on, 1. The applied field 2. Gap separation 3. Cathode Work Function 4. Liquid viscosity 5. Liquid Temperature 6. Density and molecular structure of liquid |
The breakdown mechanism depends on, 1. Nature and condition of the electrodes 2. Physical properties of the liquid and 3. Impurities and gases present in the liquid |