Abstract

Due to their high biodegradability, non-toxicity and higher fire safety guarantee, vegetablebased oils are considered today as a potential substitute for mineral and synthetic liquids for electrical insulation and especially in high voltage power transformers. However most of known vegetable oils are derived from food materials (rape-seeds, sunflower, soybeans, palms, corns and others). And one has to be vigilant to the fact that the replacement of mineral oil by natural ester fluids based on “renewably sourced” vegetable oils, does not create new problems as this could cause global food crisis due to diversion of food into insulating material oils or others (fuel). An interesting product can be jatropha curcas oil (JCO) extracted from the fruit seeds of jatropha curcas plants (“miracle tree”) which is non-food crops. These plants can be grown on marginal or degraded soils and thus enables to avoid the need to utilize those more fertile soils currently being used by smallholders to grow their staple crops; and they readily grow in areas where annual rainfall levels are significantly lower than those required by other species such as rape-seeds, sunflower, palm, soybeans, corns and others. This paper presents an experimental study of streamers phenomena in jatropha curcas methyl ester oil (JMEO) and mineral oil (MO) under positive and negative lightning impulse voltages (1.2/50 μs); JMEO is obtained by alkali base catalyzed trans-esterification process of JCO to reduce the viscosity and acidity. It is shown that basing on the streamer characteristics (shape, stopping length, velocity, current and electrical charge), JMEO could constitute a potential substitute for mineral for electrical insulation and especially in high voltage power transformers.

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