Claims
- 1. A vacuum valve, comprising:a stationary electrode and a movable electrode, said stationary electrode facing said movable electrode, wherein each of said movable and stationary electrodes comprises: a contact element having a circular shape, and a conduction column having a circular-shaped top surface facing a bottom surface of said contact element, and said conduction column including; a plurality of conduction studs positioned along peripheral locations on said circular-shaped top surface, and a plurality of U-shaped magnetic members disposed respectively around said conduction studs in order that each magnetic member is magnetized by a magnetic field produced around the respective conduction studs and in which mutually opposite magnetic poles appear at respective open ends of each magnetic member when an electric current axially flows through each of the conduction studs.
- 2. The vacuum valve according to claim 1,wherein said conduction studs are positioned at a point of 90% of a radius away from a center point on said circular-shaped top surface of said conduction column, with respect to a point on said periphery of said circular-shaped top surface of said conduction column.
- 3. The vacuum valve according to claim 1,wherein a radial distribution of axial magnetic flux densities parallel to an arc produced between the moveable and stationary electrodes upon separation increases radially outward from a center area of the contact element, a portion giving a maximum value (Bp) of the axial flux densities being located at a location of and beyond 70% of a radius of the contact element, and the maximum value (Bp) of the axial flux densities along an arbitrary radius of the contact element being 1.4 to 2.4 times greater than an axial flux density of the center area (Bct) of the contact element.
- 4. The vacuum valve according to claim 1,wherein a radial distribution of axial magnetic flux densities parallel to an arc produced between the moveable and stationary electrodes upon separation increases radially outward from a center area of the contact element, a portion giving a maximum value (Bp) of the axial flux densities being located at a location of and beyond 70% of a radius of the contact element, and the maximum value (Bp) of the axial flux densities along an arbitrary radius of the contact element being 1.05 to 2.16 times grater than an axial flux density (Bcr) which is produced when an arc voltage becomes minimum (Vmin) according to a relationship between the arc voltage and the axial flux densities.
- 5. A vacuum valve, comprising:a stationary electrode and a moveable electrode, said stationary electrode facing said moveable electrode, wherein each of said moveable and stationary electrodes comprises: a contact element having a circular shape, and a conduction column having a circular-shaped top surface facing a bottom surface of said contact element, said conduction column including; a plurality of conduction studs positioned along peripheral locations on said circular-shaped top surface, and a magnetic member disposed between the bottom surface of said contact element and said circular-shaped top surface of said conduction column, said magnetic member including a circular-shaped middle portion with a plurality of projections which extend from respective portions of said circular-shaped middle portion to each of said conduction studs to partially surround each of them in order that each projection is magnetized by a magnetic field produced around the respective conduction studs and in which a magnetic pole appears at an open end of each projection when an electric current axially flows through each of the conduction studs.
- 6. The vacuum valve according to claim 5,wherein said conduction studs are positioned at a point of 90% of a radius away from a center point on said circular-shaped top surface of said conduction column, with respect to a point on said periphery of said circular-shaped top surface of said conduction column.
- 7. The vacuum valve according to claim 5,wherein said circular-shaped middle portion of said magnetic member has a center hole which is disposed to be below a center region of said contact element.
- 8. The vacuum valve according to claim 5,wherein a radial distribution of axial magnetic flux densities parallel to an arc produced between the moveable and stationary electrodes upon separation increases radially outward from a center area of the contact element, a portion giving a maximum value (Bp) of the axial flux densities being located at a location of and beyond 70% of a radius of the contact element, and the maximum value (Bp) of the axial flux densities along an arbitrary radius of the contact element being 1.4 to 2.4 times greater than an axial flux density of the center area (Bct) of the contact element.
- 9. The vacuum valve according to claim 5,wherein a radial distribution of axial magnetic flux densities parallel to an arc produced between the moveable and stationary electrodes upon separation increases radially outward from a center area of the contact element, a portion giving a maximum value (Bp) of the axial flux densities being located at a location of and beyond 70% of a radius of the contact element, and the maximum value (Bp) of the axial flux densities along an arbitrary radius of the contact element being 1.05 to 2.16 times greater than an axial flux density (Bcr) which is produced when an arc voltage becomes minimum (Vmin) according to a relationship between the arc voltage and the axial flux densities.
- 10. The vacuum valve according to claim 5, wherein each of the plurality of projections extends directly outwards with respect to a center point of the circular-shaped middle portion of said magnetic member.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
7-226431 |
Sep 1995 |
JP |
|
Parent Case Info
This Application is a Divisional of application Ser. No. 08/836,520, filed on Jun. 9, 1997. which is a 371 of PCT/JP96/02498 filed Sep. 4, 1996.
US Referenced Citations (11)