Abstract

During the fault current breaking process of a mechanical direct current vacuum circuit breaker (DC VCB) with double-break (DB), the mechanism’s dispersion can result in a gap difference between the two breaks. A DB DC VCB breaking experiment platform is constructed in order to investigate the impact of gap difference on plasma distribution during the DB DC VCB breaking process. During the experiment, a high-speed camera is used to capture the vacuum arcing process at the two breaks under varying gap difference conditions. Then, the arc feature parameters and their variations during the zero-zone process are extracted using image processing techniques, and the distribution patterns of plasma and arc energy at the two breaks are analyzed and compared. When there is no gap difference between the two breaks of the experimental DB DC VCB, there are no significant differences in arc energy and the sizes of high-, medium-, and low-temperature plasma zones between the two breaks. When there is a gap difference between two breaks, the break with the smaller gap has larger high and medium-temperature plasma zones, more concentrated arc energy, higher particle concentration, lower arc diffusion velocity and arc energy decay velocity, and a greater amount of residual plasma after the extinguishing of the arc. When the gap difference exceeds a certain threshold, energy spots appear on the contact surfaces, and a high concentration corridor of residual particles remains between the contacts after the current crosses zero, forming a breakdown weak point that eventually leads to arc re-ignition (hence interruption failure) under the action of transient recovery voltage.

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