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Reconstruction of two-dimensional distribution function of defects dielectric bases on TSD data. / Gorokhovatsky, U. A.; Grigoriev, L. V.

In: Conference on Electrical Insulation and Dielectric Phenomena (CEIDP), Annual Report, 1995, p. 662-663.

Research output: Contribution to journalConference articlepeer-review

Harvard

Gorokhovatsky, UA & Grigoriev, LV 1995, 'Reconstruction of two-dimensional distribution function of defects dielectric bases on TSD data', Conference on Electrical Insulation and Dielectric Phenomena (CEIDP), Annual Report, pp. 662-663.

APA

Gorokhovatsky, U. A., & Grigoriev, L. V. (1995). Reconstruction of two-dimensional distribution function of defects dielectric bases on TSD data. Conference on Electrical Insulation and Dielectric Phenomena (CEIDP), Annual Report, 662-663.

Vancouver

Gorokhovatsky UA, Grigoriev LV. Reconstruction of two-dimensional distribution function of defects dielectric bases on TSD data. Conference on Electrical Insulation and Dielectric Phenomena (CEIDP), Annual Report. 1995;662-663.

Author

Gorokhovatsky, U. A. ; Grigoriev, L. V. / Reconstruction of two-dimensional distribution function of defects dielectric bases on TSD data. In: Conference on Electrical Insulation and Dielectric Phenomena (CEIDP), Annual Report. 1995 ; pp. 662-663.

BibTeX

@article{a525a380d76c4bed804fe77453a5bc5b,
title = "Reconstruction of two-dimensional distribution function of defects dielectric bases on TSD data",
abstract = "Thermally stimulated current spectroscopy due to its simplicity and informativity plays the leading role among the investigation methods of electrically active defects (EAD) in high-resistance materials. In case of disordered dielectrics, namely in polymers the EAD are characterized by the presence of distribution in general case according to activation energy (G) and frequency factor (ω), that is two-dimensional distribution function of relaxators G (W,ω). The task of thermally activated spectroscopy is to define G(W,ω) from the experimentally derived TSD current dependence on temperature. However interpreting of short-circuit thermoactivation current at present is difficult. Given all other existing solutions, this paper shows that the way out of this problem is in using Tikhonov methods of weak regularization as applied to the solution of the given task.",
author = "Gorokhovatsky, {U. A.} and Grigoriev, {L. V.}",
year = "1995",
language = "English",
pages = "662--663",
journal = "Annual report - Conference on Electrical Insulation and Dielectric Phenomena",
issn = "0084-9162",
publisher = "Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.",
note = "Proceedings of the 1995 Conference on Electrical Insulation and Dielectric Phenomena ; Conference date: 22-10-1995 Through 25-10-1995",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Reconstruction of two-dimensional distribution function of defects dielectric bases on TSD data

AU - Gorokhovatsky, U. A.

AU - Grigoriev, L. V.

PY - 1995

Y1 - 1995

N2 - Thermally stimulated current spectroscopy due to its simplicity and informativity plays the leading role among the investigation methods of electrically active defects (EAD) in high-resistance materials. In case of disordered dielectrics, namely in polymers the EAD are characterized by the presence of distribution in general case according to activation energy (G) and frequency factor (ω), that is two-dimensional distribution function of relaxators G (W,ω). The task of thermally activated spectroscopy is to define G(W,ω) from the experimentally derived TSD current dependence on temperature. However interpreting of short-circuit thermoactivation current at present is difficult. Given all other existing solutions, this paper shows that the way out of this problem is in using Tikhonov methods of weak regularization as applied to the solution of the given task.

AB - Thermally stimulated current spectroscopy due to its simplicity and informativity plays the leading role among the investigation methods of electrically active defects (EAD) in high-resistance materials. In case of disordered dielectrics, namely in polymers the EAD are characterized by the presence of distribution in general case according to activation energy (G) and frequency factor (ω), that is two-dimensional distribution function of relaxators G (W,ω). The task of thermally activated spectroscopy is to define G(W,ω) from the experimentally derived TSD current dependence on temperature. However interpreting of short-circuit thermoactivation current at present is difficult. Given all other existing solutions, this paper shows that the way out of this problem is in using Tikhonov methods of weak regularization as applied to the solution of the given task.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0029519918&partnerID=8YFLogxK

M3 - Conference article

AN - SCOPUS:0029519918

SP - 662

EP - 663

JO - Annual report - Conference on Electrical Insulation and Dielectric Phenomena

JF - Annual report - Conference on Electrical Insulation and Dielectric Phenomena

SN - 0084-9162

T2 - Proceedings of the 1995 Conference on Electrical Insulation and Dielectric Phenomena

Y2 - 22 October 1995 through 25 October 1995

ER -

ID: 86119115