Electrical harness comprising an electromagnetic protection system and a system for detecting electric arcs, and process for manufacturing such an electrical harness
US-2024112829-A1 · Apr 4, 2024 · US
US10120014B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-10120014-B2 |
| Application number | US-201715414483-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Jan 24, 2017 |
| Priority date | Jan 24, 2017 |
| Publication date | Nov 6, 2018 |
| Grant date | Nov 6, 2018 |
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Propagating brush discharge testing systems may include a dielectric layer, an initiation electrode, a high-voltage switch, an optical sensor, and a controller. The initiation electrode has an exposed tip positioned adjacent to a surface of the dielectric layer. The high-voltage switch is configured to selectively isolate the initiation electrode from ground potential. The optical sensor is positioned and configured to sense light generated at the surface due to a propagating brush discharge. The controller is programmed to operate the high-voltage switch to ground the initiation electrode and to operate the optical sensor to collect light from the propagating brush discharge. Propagating brush discharge testing methods include positioning an exposed tip of an initiation electrode with respect to a surface of a dielectric layer, then charging the surface, and then grounding the initiation electrode to neutralize charge on the surface (generally causing a propagating brush discharge).
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1. A system for performing a propagating brush discharge test, the system comprising: a grounded layer; a dielectric layer that has a first surface and is backed by the grounded layer opposite the first surface of the dielectric layer; an initiation electrode with a conductive element that has a body and an exposed tip, wherein the exposed tip is positioned adjacent to the first surface of the dielectric layer such that a voltage differential between the exposed tip and the first surface of less than 50 kV is sufficient to cause an electrical contact between the exposed tip and the first surface, wherein the body of the conductive element is electrically isolated from the dielectric layer; a high-voltage switch connected to the initiation electrode and configured to selectively isolate the conductive element of the initiation electrode from ground potential; an optical sensor positioned and configured to sense light generated at the first surface of the dielectric layer due to a propagating brush discharge centered at the exposed tip of the initiation electrode; and a controller programmed to operate the high-voltage switch to electrically ground the initiation electrode and to operate the optical sensor to collect light from the propagating brush discharge. 2. The system of claim 1 , wherein the first surface of the dielectric layer has a voltage with a magnitude of at least 4 kV, relative to ground potential. 3. The system of claim 1 , wherein the optical sensor is a camera that is configured to image the first surface of the dielectric layer with an exposure time of at most 1 μs. 4. The system of claim 1 , wherein the optical sensor is a camera that is configured to image the first surface of the dielectric layer with a sequence of image frames. 5. The system of claim 1 , wherein a cross sectional area of the exposed tip has an effective diameter of less than 1 mm. 6. The system of claim 1 , wherein a cross sectional area of the initiation electrode along the body of the conductive element has an effective diameter of at most 3 mm. 7. The system of claim 1 , wherein the initiation electrode includes an insulating sheath along the body of the conductive element, wherein the insulating sheath is spaced apart from the first surface of the dielectric layer. 8. The system of claim 1 , wherein the high-voltage switch is configured to selectively isolate the conductive element of the initiation electrode from ground potential at a voltage magnitude of the conductive element of at least 5 kV, relative to ground potential. 9. The system of claim 1 , further comprising a charge source configured to charge the first surface of the dielectric layer to a voltage with a magnitude of at least 4 kV, relative to ground potential. 10. A system for performing a propagating brush discharge test, the system comprising: a grounded layer; a dielectric layer that has a first surface and is backed by the grounded layer opposite the first surface of the dielectric layer; an initiation electrode with a conductive element that has a body and an exposed tip, wherein the exposed tip is adjacent to the first surface of the dielectric layer such that a voltage differential between the exposed tip and the first surface of less than 50 kV is sufficient to cause an electrical contact between the exposed tip and the first surface, wherein the body of the conductive element is electrically isolated from the dielectric layer, wherein the initiation electrode includes an insulating sheath along the body of the conductive element, wherein the insulating sheath is spaced apart from the first surface of the dielectric layer; a high-voltage switch connected to the initiation electrode and configured to selectively isolate the conductive element of the initiation electrode from ground potential; a flammable gas in contact with the first surface of the dielectric layer; an optical sensor positioned and configured to detect light generated by ignition of the flammable gas due to a propagating brush discharge centered at the exposed tip of the initiation electrode; and a controller programmed to operate the high-voltage switch to electrically ground the initiation electrode and to operate the optical sensor to collect light. 11. A method for performing a propagating brush discharge test on a dielectric layer, the method comprising: positioning an exposed tip of an initiation electrode adjacent to a first surface of the dielectric layer, wherein the dielectric layer is backed by a grounded layer opposite the first surface of the dielectric layer; after positioning, electrically charging the first surface of the dielectric layer to a voltage with a magnitude of at least 4 kV relative to ground potential, while the grounded layer is at ground potential and the initiation electrode is isolated from ground potential; and after electrically charging, electrically connecting the initiation electrode to ground potential so that the exposed tip of the initiation electrode neutralizes charge on the first surface of the dielectric layer. 12. The method of claim 11 , further comprising collecting light from a region that includes the first surface of the dielectric layer and the exposed tip of the initiation electrode. 13. The method of claim 12 , wherein collecting light includes collecting light generated at the first surface of the dielectric layer due to a propagating brush discharge centered at the exposed tip of the initiation electrode. 14. The method of claim 12 , wherein collecting light includes imaging the first surface within 10 μs of electrically connecting the initiation electrode to ground potential. 15. The method of claim 12 , wherein collecting light includes imaging the first surface with an exposure time of at least 10 μs. 16. The method of claim 12 , wherein collecting light includes imaging the first surface with an exposure time of at most 1 μs. 17. The method of claim 12 , wherein collecting light includes acquiring an image of the first surface and the method further comprises determining a presence of a propagating brush discharge at the first surface based upon the image of the first surface. 18. The method of claim 11 , further comprising electrically isolating the initiation electrode from ground potential with a high-voltage switch and wherein the electrically connecting the initiation electrode to ground potential includes operating the high-voltage switch. 19. The method of claim 11 , wherein electrically charging the first surface includes charging the first surface with at least one of a corona source and a charged fluid. 20. The method of claim 11 , further comprising, after electrically connecting the initiation electrode to ground potential, determining a presence of a propagating brush discharge based upon an electrical current in the initiation electrode.
measuring electrostatic potential, e.g. with electrostatic voltmeters or electrometers, when the design of the sensor is essential (electrometers with passively moving electrodes G01R5/28; measuring electrostatic fields G01R29/12; measuring charge G01R29/24; measuring in circuits with high internal resistance G01R19/0023) · CPC title
using optical methods; using charged particle, e.g. electron, beams or X-rays · CPC title
by investigating electrostatic variables {, e.g. electrographic flaw testing (G01N27/007 takes precedence)} · CPC title
Arrangements for measuring quantities of charge · CPC title
Construction of testing vessels; Electrodes therefor · CPC title
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