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A Way of Increasing Maximum Permissible Short-Circuit Surge Currents in Electrical Contacts. / Chalyi, A.M.; Дмитриев, В.А.; Pavleino, M.A.; Pavleino, O.M.; Safonov, M.S.

In: Technical Physics, Vol. 64, No. 4, 01.04.2019, p. 569-574.

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Chalyi, AM, Дмитриев, ВА, Pavleino, MA, Pavleino, OM & Safonov, MS 2019, 'A Way of Increasing Maximum Permissible Short-Circuit Surge Currents in Electrical Contacts', Technical Physics, vol. 64, no. 4, pp. 569-574. https://doi.org/10.1134/S1063784219040078

APA

Vancouver

Author

Chalyi, A.M. ; Дмитриев, В.А. ; Pavleino, M.A. ; Pavleino, O.M. ; Safonov, M.S. / A Way of Increasing Maximum Permissible Short-Circuit Surge Currents in Electrical Contacts. In: Technical Physics. 2019 ; Vol. 64, No. 4. pp. 569-574.

BibTeX

@article{8f89cfef159b42379848585164046cfa,
title = "A Way of Increasing Maximum Permissible Short-Circuit Surge Currents in Electrical Contacts",
abstract = "Abstract: Current passing through electrical contacts causes additional heat release due to the presence of a contact resistance. Heat release in contacts may be considerable. In high-current contacts of high-voltage electrical equipment, the problem of overheating gets worse when fault short-circuit currents pass through the contacts. The maximum permissible level of these currents is limited by heating contact areas to their melting point. Welds due to melting of contacts lead to their failure as a rule. A way of considerably raising maximum permissible short-circuit currents has been suggested. Its idea is impulsive preheating of contacts to a temperature higher than the recrystallization temperature of the contact material. The efficiency of this approach has been confirmed experimentally. Numerical simulation of impulsive heating has been conducted. The results have helped us elaborate recommendations for selecting parameters of a train of current pulses that, acting on a contact, may greatly improve its stability against short-circuit currents.",
keywords = "electric contacts, pulsed heating, contact spot, constriction resistance",
author = "A.M. Chalyi and В.А. Дмитриев and M.A. Pavleino and O.M. Pavleino and M.S. Safonov",
year = "2019",
month = apr,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1134/S1063784219040078",
language = "English",
volume = "64",
pages = "569--574",
journal = "Technical Physics",
issn = "1063-7842",
publisher = "Pleiades Publishing",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A Way of Increasing Maximum Permissible Short-Circuit Surge Currents in Electrical Contacts

AU - Chalyi, A.M.

AU - Дмитриев, В.А.

AU - Pavleino, M.A.

AU - Pavleino, O.M.

AU - Safonov, M.S.

PY - 2019/4/1

Y1 - 2019/4/1

N2 - Abstract: Current passing through electrical contacts causes additional heat release due to the presence of a contact resistance. Heat release in contacts may be considerable. In high-current contacts of high-voltage electrical equipment, the problem of overheating gets worse when fault short-circuit currents pass through the contacts. The maximum permissible level of these currents is limited by heating contact areas to their melting point. Welds due to melting of contacts lead to their failure as a rule. A way of considerably raising maximum permissible short-circuit currents has been suggested. Its idea is impulsive preheating of contacts to a temperature higher than the recrystallization temperature of the contact material. The efficiency of this approach has been confirmed experimentally. Numerical simulation of impulsive heating has been conducted. The results have helped us elaborate recommendations for selecting parameters of a train of current pulses that, acting on a contact, may greatly improve its stability against short-circuit currents.

AB - Abstract: Current passing through electrical contacts causes additional heat release due to the presence of a contact resistance. Heat release in contacts may be considerable. In high-current contacts of high-voltage electrical equipment, the problem of overheating gets worse when fault short-circuit currents pass through the contacts. The maximum permissible level of these currents is limited by heating contact areas to their melting point. Welds due to melting of contacts lead to their failure as a rule. A way of considerably raising maximum permissible short-circuit currents has been suggested. Its idea is impulsive preheating of contacts to a temperature higher than the recrystallization temperature of the contact material. The efficiency of this approach has been confirmed experimentally. Numerical simulation of impulsive heating has been conducted. The results have helped us elaborate recommendations for selecting parameters of a train of current pulses that, acting on a contact, may greatly improve its stability against short-circuit currents.

KW - electric contacts

KW - pulsed heating

KW - contact spot

KW - constriction resistance

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85066051605&partnerID=8YFLogxK

UR - http://www.mendeley.com/research/way-increasing-maximum-permissible-shortcircuit-surge-currents-electrical-contacts

U2 - 10.1134/S1063784219040078

DO - 10.1134/S1063784219040078

M3 - Article

VL - 64

SP - 569

EP - 574

JO - Technical Physics

JF - Technical Physics

SN - 1063-7842

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 42365149