The present invention relates to contact structures of high voltage circuit breakers. More specifically, contact structures using an interposed solid nonconductor to extinguish the arc.
The interruption of DC high voltage, high current circuits is particularly difficult due to the lack of periodically occurring current zero crossings. Arcs exhibit a negative resistance characteristic in that the arc voltage decreases with increasing current. Consequently, switch contact arcs of more than a few amperes require little voltage to maintain, and, without an arc quenching means, will continue to quickly destroy the switch contacts. The arc is extinguished by using techniques that cause a momentary current zero or techniques that raise the voltage required to maintain the arc above the voltage available or by breaking the arc into a series of short arcs.
Conventional devices use different methods for accomplishing one or more of these basic arc quenching techniques. However, most of the high voltage high current switches now in use require the use of sulfur hexafluoride, a potent greenhouse gas considered nearly 25,000 times more damaging to the environment than carbon dioxide.
Contact structures can be found in Harton et al., U.S. Pat. No. 3,053,945, and Fisher, U.S. Pat. No. 3,026,396. However, neither of those devices is intended to open active high current circuits, only to reliably isolate circuits after an additional breaker has interrupted the main load circuit.
The present invention uses a novel technique to dramatically increase the voltage required to maintain a contact arc thus significantly raising the maximum voltage interrupting capability of any switch using the contact structure without requiring the use of sulfur hexafluoride. Holding the insulating surfaces in intimate contact significantly increases the voltage interrupting capability. The arc's required maintenance voltage can be increased by lengthening the arc path, increasing the arc's heat losses, and interposing a nonconductor in the arc path.
It is the object of the present invention to provide a simple switch contact structure that is capable of rapidly interrupting high voltage, high current, DC or AC circuits.
The strategy of increasing the rate of heat transfer between the contact arc and its surrounding environment, thus increasing the voltage required to sustain the contact arc, is of particular relevance to this invention. Although the heat transfer is difficult to accurately predict, the increase in arc voltage due to the increase in heat losses is easy to understand. An arc loses heat energy by radiation, conduction, and convection, and any arc in thermal equilibrium absorbs electrical energy at a rate equal to these losses.
At any given current, if measures are taken that increase the arc's losses, there must be a corresponding increase in arc voltage to supply the additional energy or the arc will continually cool and extinguish. Consequently, the key to quenching an arc is to increase its losses until the voltage required to maintain it is greater than the available voltage.
The present invention dramatically increases the voltage required to maintain a switch contact arc by forcing the arc to assume the shape of a very thin sheet. A thin sheet has a high ratio of surface area to cross-sectional area, thus maximizing the arc's heat losses and, consequently, the arc's required maintenance voltage.
These and further and other objects and features of the invention are apparent in the disclosure, which includes the above and ongoing written specification, with the claims and the drawings.
A basic form of the invention is shown in
The losses of such an arc are usually extremely high due to the large surface area of a thin sheet relative to its cross-sectional area. Consequently, a much higher voltage is required to maintain this arc compared to one of the same current that is free to assume the normally circular cross-section. At low currents, the arc may form a number of thin filamentary arcs rather than a thin sheet but will still have greater losses than a single arc column conducting the same current.
It is important that both the conductive areas 115, 113 and nonconductive areas 119, 121, of the sliding surfaces 107, 109, are in intimate contact. The insulating surfaces fit together tightly so as to minimize the thickness of the sheet arc, thus maximizing its heat losses. The metallic contact areas are also in intimate contact with each other when closed so as to minimize the contact resistance. This is essential when using the contacts to conduct and interrupt high currents. Springs or interference fits or the like may be used to ensure intimate contact between both insulating and conductive surfaces.
The insulating portions 119, 121 of the sliding surfaces 107, 109 need not totally surround the metallic contact areas, as is shown in
The addition of a nonconductive armature 6, shown in
A cylindrical surface is a particularly useful form of the present invention.
The contact assembly housing 13 holds the split contact blocks 12 together and serves to mount the contact assembly to a switch actuator housing 21 with connectors, for example, screws 20. A pair of insulators 14 hold the electrodes 10 centered as they pass through holes in the housing 13. The armature 15 is attached to the end of the actuating rod 18 using the armature's cap screw or bolt 29.
As shown in
As the insulating ring segment 26 breaks the electrical connection between the electrode contacts 22, any arc created is confined by the inner surface of the seal ring 16 and the armature's insulating ring 25. Either a precise fit or a slight interference fit, depending on the choice of insulating materials, between the insulating ring 25 and the seal ring 16 leaves virtually no space for the arc, forcing it to assume the shape of a thin curved sheet on opposite sides of the insulating ring 25. A slight interference fit works well when a plastic is used for either the insulating ring 25 or the seal ring 16 (or both). A precision fit is needed when both are hard, rigid insulating materials such as, but not limited to, ceramic. The insulating seal ring 16 is held in place by plate 17 and screws 19. The insulating seal ring 16 is thus easily replaced by removing the screws 19 and the plate 17. The armature components are also easily replaced.
Another configuration of the present invention is shown in
The connection is made by a pair of conductive segments 37 and 38 of the armature 42, connected to each other with conductive rod 39 under the surface of an insulating segment 40 placed between the two conductive segments 37 and 38. Tight fitting insulating blocks 32 and 35 are immediately adjacent to the resilient contact structures 30 and 33. Conductors 31 and 34 are connected to the contact structures 30 and 33. The electrical connection between the resilient contact structures 30 and 33 is opened by moving the armature 42 until the resilient contacts 30 and 33 are resting on insulated segments 36 and 40 of the armature. The conductive segments 37 and 38 are some distance into the insulating blocks 32 and 35, confining the arcs between the insulating surfaces as previously described. Precision fits in lieu of tight fit may be used with rigid insulating materials as described earlier.
The invention comprises, but is not limited to, the following features:
2. The switch contact structure where the opposing surfaces are planar, triangular, quadrilateral, polygonal, cylindrical, spherical in shape or any figure of revolution or any combination of these shapes capable of sliding against each other while maintaining intimate contact over a significant area.
3. The switch contact structure where the insulating surfaces and the conductive surfaces are held in mutual intimate contact using one or more springs, elastic components, or by interference or precision fits or by any combination of springs, elastic components, and precision or interference fits.
While the invention has been described with reference to specific embodiments, modifications and variations of the invention may be constructed without departing from the scope of the invention, which is defined in the following claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/374,495 filed Apr. 23, 2002.
This invention was made with Government support under Contract No. DE FG02-99ER52915 awarded by the Department of Energy. The Government has certain rights in this invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3239637 | Pierce | Mar 1966 | A |
4426562 | Kemeny | Jan 1984 | A |
5818148 | Shiomi | Oct 1998 | A |
5898142 | Ohtaki et al. | Apr 1999 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60374495 | Apr 2002 | US |