The invention relates to a surface coating formed of a composite material.
A nonstatic industrial installation, such as a wind turbine, for example, may experience great problems as a result of a lightning strike. Given that wind power installations are usually erected at exposed locations, which frequently constitute the highest point within a larger territory, there are particular considerations which apply here. Since the highest point of a vertical wind turbine turning on a mast at great height at any given time is the tip of a rotor blade, the entry region for the lightning will be situated on one of the rotor blades. The very high current density in lightning must therefore be conducted downward through the rotor. Accordingly, in the event of an incoming lightning strike, the rotor blade, owing to the internal resistance of the materials used, suffers typical lightning damage, manifested in the form of fire, overheating of the individual components, and temperature-related mechanical deformation.
In existing wind power installations, conventional metallic conductor tracks either are mounted completely on the outer skin of the rotor blade, or they run within the rotor blade, with only the end emerging from the rotor blade at its tip. Another form of lightning protection is realized by the introduction of a metallic mesh into a topcoat layer over the entire length of the rotor blade. The result locally is a metallic structure which takes resultant currents and voltages to ground through a connection to the base stand of the wind power installation.
In
The individual rotor blades here, from left to right, have different measures for lightning protection. The rotor blade on the left in
For the grounding of the rotor blade, the rotor blade lying on the right in
One embodiment provides a surface coating for lightning conduction, represented by an electrically conductive composite material which comprises a matrix made of a polymer, and a filler made of lamellar ceramic particles, wherein the lamellar ceramic particles are provided with an electrically conductive, metal-oxide coating.
In a further embodiment, the lamellar ceramic particles comprise mica.
In a further embodiment, the electrically conductive, metal-oxide coating of the lamellar ceramic particles comprises a metal-oxide coating which exhibits a nonlinear profile of the electrical resistance as a function of the electrical field strength.
In a further embodiment, the electrically conductive metal-oxide coating comprises an antimony doped tin oxide layer, Sb:SnO2.
In a further embodiment, the antimony doped tin oxide layer, Sb:SnO2, has a high electrical resistance at small field strengths and a very much smaller electrical resistance at large field strengths.
In a further embodiment, the antimony doped tin oxide layer on the lamellar ceramic particles are filled with at least 10 mol % of antimony Sb.
In a further embodiment, the filler comprises a mixture of particles which are ceramic in each case and are provided with an antimony doped tin oxide layer and are of lamellar and/or spherical formation.
In a further embodiment, the matrix is prepared from a polysilazane or from a polysiloxane.
In a further embodiment, organic fractions are eliminated by pyrolysis and with the polysilazane matrix a stable SiN framework being present, or with the polysiloxane matrix a stable SiO2 framework.
Another embodiment comprises a process for preparing a surface coating as disclose above, wherein the conductive surface coating comprising solvent, is applied in liquid form, and cured, and pyrolysis of the surface coating is performed at short temperature intervals with temperatures up to 700° C., to give a glasslike, temperature-stable, electrically conductive surface coating.
In a further embodiment, the antimony doped tin oxide layer of the lamellar ceramic particles is filled with at least 10 mol % of antimony Sb.
Another embodiment provides the use of any of surface coatings disclosed above for lightning protection on nonmetallic rotor blades of a wind power installation.
Another embodiment provides the use of any of surface coatings disclosed above for lightning protection on nonmetallic surface regions of an aircraft.
Another embodiment provides the use of any of surface coatings disclosed above for lightning protection on carbon fiber-reinforced components.
Another embodiment provides the use of any of surface coatings disclosed above for lightning protection on components made of fiber-reinforced plastic.
Example embodiments are described in detail below with reference to the figures, in which:
Embodiments of the invention provide a lightning protection means for nonstatic installations, such as a wind power installation or an aircraft, for example, to provide components, such as rotor blades on wind power installations, for example, with sufficient lightning protection to conduct away the potential difference that occurs and, accordingly, to reduce or minimize existing problems in relation to fire prevention or severe thermal loading.
Aspects of the invention are based on the finding that the difference in potential that occurs in the case of lightning can be dissipated over the entire surface of an installation without an excessive current density causing severe damage to the installation, by means of a surface coating on those moving areas —particularly areas moving within air—of an installation, with a temperature-stable composite material filled with highly conductive particles.
A layer of composite material as a surface coating is described, including or consisting of a polymer, particularly a polysilazane or polysiloxane, which is filled with a filler composed of lamellar ceramic particles (14) having an electrically conductive, metal-oxide coating. This antimony tin oxide (Sb:SnO2) or antimony-doped tin oxide layer is advantageously applied to mica flakes and doped with antimony, to give electrical conductivity.
For a coating on rotor blades it is advantageous for the application of the composite material to be flexible. Experimentally, a number of organic matrices are already employed in spraying methods as layers of composite material, and hence such product groups can be employed for functional coating of a curved surface, and in principle a complete rotor wing can be coated via spray application.
The coating is a composite material with a ceramic filler composed of a lamellar substrate such as mica, for example, and also of an electrically conductive, metal-oxide coating, such as antimony tin oxide, for example.
Employed advantageously as matrix are substances which cure at room temperature or low temperature, such as polysiloxane or polysilazane.
Further advantages are attainable if a surface coating is pyrolyzed at low moderate temperature. This is done in order to increase further the conductivity of the existing layer.
Filler materials which can be used with preference are metal particles or metal oxide particles with very good conductivity.
The shape of the filler particles may vary—between globular and lamellar, for example. In the case of globular fillers, a very high degree of volume fill, of up to 50 vol %, for example, is necessary, whereas in the case of lamellar filler a stable electrical conductivity is established at a lower level of volume fill, of 25 vol %, for example.
This is called percolation threshold. Mixtures of the aforesaid examples are possible.
It is advantageous to utilize an easy-to-apply coating material, which preferably has good sprayability, so that electrically highly conductive microparticles can be applied thereby as a filling on prefabricated components, and rotor blades of wind power installations, for example, can be easily coated and contacted.
A substantial advantage arises as a result of the partial conductivity of the coating. There is no polarization effect, which would contribute to lightning events. Accordingly, the probability of an incoming lightning strike recedes with this procedure.
In the event of a lightning strike, on the other hand, the high field strength which accompanies the strike results in very high conductivity of the coating and hence in effective conduction of charge through this coating.
The fact of the surface-covering coating of the entire component provides a very high cross-sectional area for the conduction of high electrical currents and voltages. In the case of an incoming lightning strike, accordingly, there is no dangerous excessive temperature increase in the coating as a result of local currents, and there is no degeneration of the polymer layers beneath or overheating of the electrical components.
Particular advantages arise if the partially conductive surface coating at small field strengths has a substantially higher resistance than, for example, metallic conductors impregnated as a mesh into the wind power installations for the purpose of conducting lightning. Accordingly there is no strong polarization effect, which could contribute to the development of a flash discharge.
Consequently, the likelihood of an incoming lightning strike is reduced.
In the course of storms, considerable space charges arise. In addition, within a charged storm cloud, there may be further charge separation mechanisms. If a lightning bolt is triggered, a potential equalization occurs. This is manifested either in intracloud lightning, in other words within the cloud, or in a cloud-to-ground lightning, i.e., between the Earth and the lower portion of the cloud. For lightning bolts between the clouds and the Earth, the potential difference must amount to several 10 000 000 V. In the air, an electrical spark discharge only occurs at an electrical field strength of around 3 000 000 V/m, corresponding to what is called the breakdown field strength.
However, this value decreases significantly with increasing air humidity. To date, however, no such field strengths have been measured in a storm cloud. Measurements only extremely rarely produce field strengths of more than 200 000 V/m. This figure is well below the breakdown field strength value. It is nowadays assumed that the air must first be made conductive by ionization so that a lightning discharge can occur.
The current flowing to ground, at existing resistances, evokes a voltage drop and hence a potential gradient around the strike point. The strike of a lightning bolt corresponds to the connection of a current circuit which is fed with impressed current from an energy source.
The field strength under consideration is generally that built up by the flash discharge and the difference in potential that arises at the lightning strike location.
The rotor blade 11 shown on the right in
Lamellar ceramic fillers have a number of advantages over purely spherical particles:
Using a polysilazane matrix it is possible to generate an electrically conductive composite material which is sprayable at room temperature and subsequently cures approximately at room temperature.
Advantages of this matrix are as follows:
A surface coating constructed in accordance with the invention may bring about a reduction in resistance in the layer of composite material by several decades, as a result of pyrolysis of different silicon-containing, partially organic matrices, and so the electrical conductivity compares with the pure powder conductivity, measured on a powder ram. The pressure of the powder ram in this case is to be selected such that the compaction and hence the volume packing density coefficient is the same as that of the initial volume introduction into the composite material.
Visible in
The tin oxide identified in connection with
As a matrix, there are a variety of materials that can be used for a lightning protection coating. Theoretically it would be possible to use thermosets such as epoxides, for example, and thermoplastics such as PEEK, PAI, or PEI, for example.
Some embodiments of the invention pertains to polysiloxanes such as, for example, silicone elastomers or silicone resins. The composite material can be applied by brush coating, dip coating, or powder coating.
Through the use of defined metal oxide particles as a highly conductive filler material, it is possible to utilize the optical absorption in certain wavelength ranges of the filler, tin oxide for example, in order to bring about a very high surface temperature as a result of a high irradiation power, infrared irradiation for example. With suitable duration and intensity, pyrolysis is brought about in the composite material layer, with the organic fraction of the matrix being burnt out. The result, given an appropriate matrix formulation, is a stable SiO2 framework, and can be referred to as ceramic glass. The intensity and duration of irradiation must be adapted to the pyrolysis process and to the layer thickness of the coating, without detriment to the fundamental functionality of the underlying material, such as glass fiber-reinforced plastic with a maximum temperature loading of 155° C., for example.
Through this process it is possible to produce a highly conductive, corrosion-resistant, and water-repellent layer on the surface of organic components with low-temperature stability, without damaging the underlying material, as would be the case, for example, in a complete oven temperature cycle for the curing of the layer.
A curve 81 shows the profile of the weight of the surface coating in weight percent as a function of the temperature 10. The curve 101 represents the profile of the temperature as a function of the time.
Since a composite material has been selected for the surface coating, it is necessary first of all to nominate a matrix, which is a polymer. A polysiloxane or a polysilazane is used more particularly. Next, the filler is considered, which in this case is ceramic, composed of a lamellar substrate, as for example mica.
This filler is represented by an electrically conductive metal-oxide coating including or consisting of antimony tin oxide, Sb:SnO2, or antimony doped tin oxide.
The coating here is a partially conductive coating, which within the percolation, with an initial filling of at least 20 vol %, has a high resistance at low field strengths. In combination with this, however, this layer has a very high conductivity at large field strengths as a result of nonlinear behavior of the particle resistance. In a double-logarithmic plot of the voltage/resistance characteristic of a layer of composite material of this kind, the nonlinearity factor α is obtained as the slope of the linear resistance drop with increasing field strength. In this regard, see
The measurement of the nonlinearity of a layer of composite material including or consisting of a polysilazane matrix with a lamellar filler, the antimony-doped tin oxide, 15 mol % antimony, gives a nonlinearity factor of 3.7. This is in agreement with the measurements of systems which have less doping but are otherwise equivalent. The resulting resistance for a field strength E=550 V/mm under a current density of j=28 A/mm2 comes out at ρ=2 Ωcm. Measurement here took place by means of a charge pulse of 55 kV and also 280 A, in order to simulate a real lightning strike. In this case there are local instances of conductive paths developing, but there is no apparent mechanical damage, let alone delamination, of the layer. Accordingly, even at the point of the incoming lightning strike, there is no mechanical damage to the wing beneath. As the process continues, the charge is conducted away radially from the strike point over the entire surface area, resulting in increasingly smaller current densities, and therefore being noncritical.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2013 212 737.5 | Jun 2013 | DE | national |
10 2013 215 713.4 | Aug 2013 | DE | national |
This application is a U.S. National Stage Application of International Application No. PCT/EP2014/060961 filed May 27, 2014, which designates the United States of America, and claims priority to DE Application No. 10 2013 212 737.5 filed Jun. 28, 2013 and DE Application No. 10 2013 215 713.4 filed Aug. 8, 2013, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2014/060961 | 5/27/2014 | WO | 00 |