Positive Coaxial Cylindrical Corona Discharges in Pure N2, O2, and Mixtures Thereof
- 1 April 1951
- journal article
- conference paper
- Published by AIP Publishing in Journal of Applied Physics
- Vol. 22 (4) , 494-503
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1699990
Abstract
Dc corona studies were made on coaxial cylinders with inner cylinder at positive potentials in pure N2, pure O2, and mixtures of 1 percent, 10 percent O2 in N2 and on clean air from 27‐mm to 760‐mm pressure. Observations of current‐potential relations from field intensified ionization currents to as near breakdown as possible were made noting thresholds for current transitions, pulsed discharges, and other oscillographic as well as visual appearances. Positive corona in pure N2 does not exist as such. Predischarge Townsend currents by photon action on the cathode condition the outer Ni cathode until it spontaneously develops a glow discharge focusing in a spot on the anode wire. The discharge sets in at high potential and persists with lowering by hundreds of volts. Increase in current gives multiple spots and irregular current fluctuations. At lower pressure potential overshoot gradually disappears and the discharge begins as a regular glow discharge. Positive coronas with 1 percent O2 show burst pulses at threshold, these being longer in duration (1000 μsec) than in air because of spread down the wire. At lower pressure burst pulses lasted still longer. Breakdown streamers were observed at lower pressures where the applied potential was adequate. The Townsend equation for current in coaxial geometry applies above threshold both for N2 and N2+1 percent O2. In air the positive corona sequence showing only burst pulses at threshold and breakdown streamers were observed. Burst pulses lasted two to four times those with 1‐mm diameter point to plane corona in air owing to spread along the wire, which was less extensive than in 1 percent O2. In pure O2 the high absorption of photons ionizing the gas led to pre‐onset streamers and no burst pulses at thresholds above 200‐mm pressure. Below 200 mm streamer pulses and burst pulses were observed and below 50 mm only burst pulses were observed. The streamers above 200‐mm spread down the whole length of the tube by transparency of O2 to photons liberating electrons from the Ni cathode cylinder.This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
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