Published November 20, 2015
| Version v1
Publication
Annealing Effect on the Conductivity of XLPE Insulation in Power Cable
Description
Conductivity () in XLPE insulation of power cables annealed at 90 ºC at
temperatures between 50 and 97 ºC has been measured. In all cases there is an initial
increase in conductivity that develops a maximum and finally decreases for long
annealing times. This maximum appears in the sample annealed 20 days when
conductivity is measured at 50 ºC and shifts gradually to higher annealing times up to
40 days when the measurement is performed at 97 ºC. A linear behavior of ln() versus
T -1/4 is observed, which implies that the transport mechanism is basically via thermally
assisted hopping conduction. Infrared spectroscopy indicates that, during annealing,
some chemical species diffuse from the semiconducting shields (SC) into the XLPE.
Thermally stimulated depolarization currents technique (TSDC) and intensity-current
measurements (I-V) point out as well the presence of this diffusion process that
becomes less significant after long annealing times. The initial increase in is
explained in terms of the increase in traps density due to the diffusion process from the
SC shields. Long term decrease in is justified by the observed decrease of diffusion
rate for long annealing times.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- https://idus.us.es/handle/11441/30874
- URN
- urn:oai:idus.us.es:11441/30874
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- USE