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Operating features of a high-voltage spark gap switch with gas blow normal to the breakdown path in a repetitively pulsed mode

Authors :
S. D. Korovin
A. V. Gunin
N. M. Bykov
Yu. D. Korolev
Source :
Instruments and Experimental Techniques. 51:838-845
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Pleiades Publishing Ltd, 2008.

Abstract

The results of studies of a high-voltage two-electrode spark gap switch (SGS) with forced gas blow at an operation voltage of up to 1.2 MV are presented. An SGS filled with nitrogen as the working gas at a pressure of up to 16 atm operated as the high-voltage switch of a high-current nanosecond electron accelerator. The gas flow was directed normally to the breakdown path. The SGS switched a 50-Ω forming line with an electrical length of 10 ns to a matched load. The voltage rise time across the electrodes before breakdown was ∼25µs. A stable repetitively pulsed mode is realized at operating voltages of 100–680 kV and pulse repetition rates of up to 270 Hz with a standard deviation of the pulse breakdown voltage of ≤1%. The physical mechanisms that determine unstable operation of the device during self-breakdown are analyzed.

Details

ISSN :
16083180 and 00204412
Volume :
51
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Instruments and Experimental Techniques
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........03dc27330911eaa7e30a7f46f21d1b07
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1134/s0020441208060110