Embodiments of the invention relate to a device for protecting against lightning and overvoltages.
Protection devices are provided as, among others, lightning and/or overvoltage protection in the primary power system of physical structures, wherein the external conductors are each connected to the neutral conductor by means of a lightning surge arrestor. Such a device is also known as a discharge arrangement or surge arrestor arrangement.
An arrestor serves to prevent hazards to life, system and device damage, and fire. The task of the lightning and overvoltage protection is the reduction of overvoltages to a protection level of 1.5 kV, and arresting strong current surges up to 50 kA. Explosive flames and shock waves must be avoided in order to enable installation in typical equipment without observing special safety clearances and passive fire prevention measures. The extinguishing capabilities and the limiting of the power frequency follow current must be designed so that service line main fuses are not triggered. Finally, compatibility with standardized assembly systems and ruggedness with respect to climate influences and pollution are required.
Typical characteristic data of such lightning and overvoltage protection devices are: a D.C. spark-over voltage of Vsdc>600 V, a surge spark-over voltage vas≦1.5 kV for a voltage increase rate of 5 kV/μs, a nominal surge current iSN of 50 kA for standardized surge current curves of 8/20 μs and 10/350 μs and, in each case, 15 times load factor, and a power frequency follow current of ≦50 kA.
When a surge arrestor is triggered, an arc is generated that creates combustion products, which can precipitate as a conductive vaporization on the interior cylinder of the ceramic or insulating material and cause a fault in the insulation.
For fulfilling the protection function, a low dynamic spark-over voltage is required. For the entire component the required value is 1500 V, if a ramp-shaped voltage increasing at a rate of 5 kV/μs is applied. For a single arrestor, this level of protection and the remaining characteristic data imply that an ignition aid must be used. One way to improve the ignition behavior is the introduction of an ignition strip made of graphite, for example, which makes primary charge carriers available, biases the electrical field, and improves the dynamic ignition behavior by means of a creeping discharge along the ceramic surface of the inner wall of the cylinder.
In one aspect, the invention provides a device with which a desired characteristic data can be attained or exceeded.
A device for protecting against lightning and overvoltages provides two electrodes closing off in a gas tight manner both end faces of a cylinder, made of insulating material, particularly aluminum oxide ceramic, and defining a discharge chamber in the interior of the chamber thus formed. Within the chamber, a step is provided in the contact area of at least one of the electrodes and of the cylinder such that the chamber extends beyond the inner wall of the cylinder.
The electrodes are preferably composed of copper or copper alloys. The chamber is the entire gas-filled interior resulting after soldering or sealing the cylinder to the electrodes. The discharge chamber is basically the chamber region; however, a high energy discharge for protection against lightning and overvoltages takes place in a discharge path formed between electrode surfaces facing each other at a close distance, particularly in the central region of the device. The region of the face side of the cylinder, at which in principle the cylinder can be connected or soldered to the electrodes, is designated as the contact region. Thus, the contact region extends at least over the thickness of the inner wall of the cylinder.
Due to the step, the insulation distance to the respective electrode is lengthened at least by the length and height of the step. A high insulation level of the device, or of the arrestor, is thereby attained during the entire service life, even with repeated impulse or follow current discharges.
It is provided that the step is disposed in the face side inner wall of the cylinder. Alternatively, or in addition, the step is disposed in at least one of the electrodes.
Ignition aids, particularly ignition strips made of graphite, that are applied on the inner wall of the cylinder, and that extend in one embodiment up to the face side inner wall of the cylinder, improve the ignition behavior and the discharge ability of the device or the arrester. The ignition aid improves the dynamic ignition behavior of the arrestor, in that it particularly provides, primary charge carriers, biases the electric field, and improves a creeping discharge along the surface of the ceramic cylinder.
As an alternative or supplement to ignition aids, it is provided that the electrodes are coated with an activation mass, which also improves the ignition behavior.
The ignition properties of the device can be improved further if the ignition aids extend on the inner wall of the cylinder up to the step in the face side inner wall of the cylinder. The distance from the end of the ignition strips to the metal electrode (residual insulation) can thereby be adjusted, and kept so small that the function of the ignition strip is optimized. It is particularly provided in one embodiment that the ignition aids are widened in the transition region from the inner wall to the face side inner wall of the cylinder.
Further variations of the geometry of the ignition strip are provided so that they further improve the dynamic ignition behavior of the arrestor.
In one embodiment, the ignition strips thus formed are distributed over the inner circumference of the cylinder at intervals of 45°.
The device is designed for stacking, so that a plurality of similarly constructed devices can be stacked. Modules having a plurality of individually exchangeable devices that can have different spark-over voltages can thereby be constructed in a simple manner.
In one embodiment, at least one of the electrodes has a cup-shaped region and a bead-shaped region extending in the longitudinal direction of the device on each side of the plane of the contact area of the cylinder and the electrode. This enables particularly efficient stacking because the center electrode of two arrestors must be present only once, although it is available to both arrestors as an electrode.
In one embodiment, the arrestor is built so that the electrodes are mirrored about the transverse axis of the device. This enables efficient stacking with small dimensions of the module built in this manner.
In a module, multiple devices or arrestors are connected in series. It is particularly space saving when two series-connected devices have a common center electrode that is built as one of the two electrodes of each of the two devices.
The properties of a module including series connected arrestors can be optimized when a varistor is connected in parallel to at least a section of the series connected devices. A plurality of varistors can also be connected in parallel to combinations of arrestors, as required.
In one embodiment of the module, a plurality of arrestors having different spark-over voltages is connected in series.
The use of one or a plurality of arrestors with a hermetically sealed, gas-filled housing enables the prevention of explosive flames and shock waves.
A series connection of a plurality of arrestors with different characteristics in one module makes it possible to control the required DC spark-over voltage, the surge spark-over voltage, and the power frequency follow current. Additionally connecting a varistor arranged in parallel to a plurality of series connected elements improves the behavior when loaded at the required DC spark-over voltage and the surge spark-over voltage. The high arc voltage of the individual arrestors limits the power frequency follow current.
Due to the high thermal capacity of the arrangement, particularly with the use of copper electrodes, and the good thermal conductivity of the filling gas, the arc is efficiently cooled, and the extinguishing behavior is improved.
In one practical embodiment, a module includes a retaining device having two electrically conducting retainers arranged on both sides of the module and connected by standoff isolators, and that clamp the module. The potential low construction height of an arrestor, and also of a series connection of arrestors in a module that is clamped between contact elements, as needed, simplifies the mounting of the device.
The design of an arrestor and the potential for a modular design of multiple arrestors allow optimization of the device. The use and the geometry of ignition strips support the defined spark-over of the device.
The combination of arrestors with varistors improves the protection of the system to be protected.
The subject described above is explained in more detail in the following, based on the figures and exemplary embodiments.
The following described drawings are not to be viewed as true to scale. Rather, individual dimensions are enlarged, reduced, or even distorted for improved representation. Elements that are the same, or that take on the same functions, are labeled with the same reference numbers.
a shows an arrestor having a step in the cylinder made of insulating material,
b shows an arrestor having a step in each of the two electrodes,
c shows an insulating cylinder having a step and ignition strips on the inner wall and the step,
d shows the cylinder according to
e shows an arrestor having a step in the cylinder and in each of the two electrodes.
a to 4c shows equivalent circuit diagrams of modules having varistors that are in parallel to arrestors, and
An arrestor according to
According to
According to
e shows an embodiment where the step 4 is arranged in at least one of the electrodes and also in an inner wall of the cylinder.
The step 4 in the ceramic, or 41 in the electrode, prevents a continuous metallization layer during an arc discharge in the arrestor, and with it insulation problems of the arrestor, which can lead to a reduction in function, or render it unusable.
By using ignition strips 5 or 51 on the inner surface of the housing, and pasting the electrodes with an activation mass, the ignition behavior and the loading capacity of the arrestor can be further optimized.
The distance from the ignition strip 5, 51 to the metal electrodes of the arrestor is important for the function of the device and of the ignition strip of each arrestor. In an embodiment according to
c shows the ignition strips 52 on the inner wall of the cylinder, and the step 4 in detail, and in
After closure soldering, during which advantageously a gas mixture of high thermal conductivity and dielectric strength that is easily adjustable dependent on pressure, e.g., Ar/H2/Ne mixture, is used, a hermetically sealed, gas-filled arrestor having defined adjusted static and dynamic ignition properties and a high arc voltage is the result.
In order to attain protection from higher voltages and lightning, a plurality of arrestors constructed according to
According to
The arrestors are constructed so that the electrodes are mirrored about the transverse axis of the device. This enables efficient stacking with small dimensions of the module built in this way.
In the modules according to
According to
a shows a preferred embodiment comprising the six elements FS200 having vas=200 V and one element FS600 having vas=600 V, in combination with two varistors V1 having 250 V and V2 having 420 V.
Clamping enables the simple adaptation of the electrical properties to the application, wherein individual arrestors can be varied or exchanged, and external wiring of different partial sections can be performed. This wiring occurs preferably with varistors, but it can be also realized in another manner with the goal of attaining a rapid increase in the potential at one or more individual arrestors in the case of dynamic loading.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2007 029 093 | Jun 2007 | DE | national |
This application is a continuation of co-pending International Application No. PCT/EP2008/057914, filed Jun. 20, 2008, which designated the United States and was not published in English, and which claims priority to German Application No. 10 2007 029 093.6 filed Jun. 21, 2007, both of which applications are incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20100156264 A1 | Jun 2010 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/EP2008/057914 | Jun 2008 | US |
Child | 12643155 | US |