Abstract

Surface charge accumulation subjected to direct current (DC) voltages poses hazardous effects on the surface insulation performance of the involved insulators. It is of great significance to investigate surface charge regulation methods applicable to industrialized spacers. In this study, we propose a graded conductivity coating method, with excellent adhesion strength consisting of TiO2/epoxy composites with different TiO2 contents, realizing a gradually decreased conductivity distribution on the spacer surface from high voltage (HV) to grounded (GND) electrodes. Surface charging behavior and flashover performance under DC voltages on this kind of spacer is obtained. A simulation model for surface charge computation is constructed for the sake of better understanding the surface charging mechanism on spacers with graded conductivity coating. The results indicate that the randomly distributed surface charges are obviously suppressed by this coating manner and the ring-shaped homo-charges adjacent to HV and GND electrode dominate surface charge patterns. The main cause lies in the fact that surface charge dominant mechanism changes from the bulk conductivity model to the surface conductivity model, where surface leakage current becomes the primary sources of surface charges, with the increase in coating conductivity. DC flashover performance is enhanced as well due to the improvement of surface charge accumulation and electric field distribution. This study supplies an important reference for designing DC gas insulated transmission line spacers of high reliability as well as inspires novel ideas in surface charge regulation.

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