Abstract

With the increasing penetration of power electronic interfaces in the power grid, insulation materials will begin to experience stresses at higher frequencies than the conventional 50 Hz AC. This article studies the lifetime curves of oil-impregnated paper (OIP) under pulsed stresses and compares them at 10 kHz and 50 kHz. A pulse modulator is constructed consisting of a rectified DC supply feeding an H-bridge pulse driver connected to a 4:200 pulse transformer. The modulator is used to apply medium voltage pulse waveforms with rise-times of Tr ≈ 1.8 µs across single-layer OIP samples. The results clearly show that an increase in pulse frequency significantly accelerates insulation ageing. However, it is also observed that below a certain threshold of field strength, the slope of the lifeline decreases dramatically thereby indicating decelerated ageing. Possible reasons for this phenomenon are also discussed in this article.

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