Abstract

Partial discharge (PD) measurement of an insulation system is widely used as a diagnostic tool for the quality control of high voltage apparatuses. In ac, the conventional method of PD detection is well established. However, under square voltages such as those generated across power electronic converters, the conventional method cannot discriminate between PDs and switching transients. In this context, this paper demonstrates PD detection under fast-rising square voltages by deploying a photomultiplier tube. For this, an experimental set-up generating unipolar square voltage (USV) waveforms is developed, generating a dV/dt in the range of 10-100 kV/μs. The device under test (DUT) comprises of needle-barrier plane configuration immersed in dielectric liquids. Barriers differing in permittivity and thicknesses are chosen to test with two types of dielectric liquids, to assess varying conditions. The results thus obtained show a lower partial discharge inception voltage (PDIV) in USV than in bipolar ac for the same DUT specimen. The phase-resolved (PR) PD patterns exhibit a higher PD occurrence during rising and falling front of the USV waveform. Experimental results demonstrate the relevance of the PMT as a PD detector for square voltage waveforms exhibiting high dV/dt in dielectric liquids.

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