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Electrical breakdown in gases

Digest of Literature on Dielectrics Volume 42 1978, 1978
The aim of this chapter is to gather information relevant to the electrical discharges and breakdown in insulating gases. References to the vast amount of literature on gas lasers, thermonuclear plasmas, magneto-hydrodynamics, high energy physics and many of the other related technical areas that make use of gas discharges are excluded from this ...
Nazar H. Malik, A. H. Qureshi
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Electrical breakdown in gases

Digest of Literature on Dielectrics, Volume 41, 1977, 1977
The subject of electrical discharges in gases is a very general one which encompasses many other fields, such as plasma chemistry and laser processes, while it, in turn, makes use of results obtained in such allied areas as the physics of collisions. This lack of clearly defined boundaries creates inevitable difficulty for someone attempting to compile
G. Berger   +5 more
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Electrical Breakdown in Water Vapor

Physical Review E, 2011
In this paper investigations of the voltage required to break down water vapor are reported for the region around the Paschen minimum and to the left of it. In spite of numerous applications of discharges in biomedicine, and recent studies of discharges in water and vapor bubbles and discharges with liquid water electrodes, studies of the basic ...
Skoro, N.   +4 more
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Electrical Breakdown in Vacuum

IEEE Transactions on Electrical Insulation, 1985
In this paper vacuum breakdown phenomena are reviewed in two parts. The first considers the development of thought concerning electrical breakdown in vacuum with particular regard to field emission, interaction of cathode emission at the anode, and particle effects, including impurities.
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Electrical Breakdown in CSF8

Journal of Applied Physics, 1950
The breakdown potential of a new gas, CSF8, has been measured over the range from pδ=4 to 200 mm×cm under conditions approximating plane-parallel geometry. A comparison of breakdown in air Freon-12 and CSF8 in the same apparatus indicates the ratio of the strengths of these gases to be approximately 1:2:3, respectively.
Ronald Geballe, Fred S. Linn
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Electrical Breakdown of Gases [PDF]

open access: possiblePhysics Bulletin, 1979
J M Meek and J D Craggs (eds) 1978 Chichester: John Wiley x + 878 pp price £35 The well known compendious postgraduate text of 1953 has suffered a complete metamorphosis except for the title. Surprisingly, the former authors, now wearing editors' hats, invited nine contributors to compose 11 new chapters.
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Electrical Breakdown in Gases [PDF]

open access: possiblePhysics Bulletin, 1974
J A Rees (ed) London: Macmillan 1973 pp ix + 294 price £7.95 For one's eight pounds one does not, as might be expected, get a heavy addition to the row of numerous, excellent texts on this important field. In fact Dr Rees has merely selected a number of pieces from its literature of the last three quarters of a century, with a page or so of commentary ...
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Electrical breakdown in vacuum

Journal of the Institution of Electrical Engineers, 1953
Direct and impulse voltages were applied to an electrode system in a vacuum of the order of 10−5 mm Hg. Of particular interest were the results obtained with a needle-and-sphere system, the breakdown voltage of which was considerably higher than that of a normal sphere-gap with the same electrode spacing, especially when a very fine needle was used ...
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Electric breakdown in dielectric liquids [PDF]

open access: possiblePhysics in Technology, 1985
Electrical power systems rely on effective insulation. A better understanding of the processes leading to breakdown is essential in improving overall reliability. The authors attempt to explain the breakdown phenomenon in general based on the observations made with dielectric liquids.
G.J. FitzPatrick, E.O. Forster
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The Dynamics of Electrical Breakdown in Liquid Hydrocarbons [PDF]

open access: possibleIEEE Transactions on Electrical Insulation, 1978
Abstract The development of an electrical spark in an insulating liquid such as liquid hydrocarbons has been studied using a pulsed laser schlieren technique. This technique consists of splitting a 15 ns laser pulse, coming from a Q-switched Ruby laser, into two beams one of which is delayed by some 60 ns with respect to the other.
P. P. Wong, Eric O Forster
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