Exploding wire energy absorption dynamics at slow current rates

Absorption of electrical energy provided to a metal wire in an exploding wire system is thought to be terminated or greatly diminished when the plasma is formed, after the joule heating of the metallic wire by the electrical current. Accordingly, it is common to account for the electrical energy del...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Rodríguez Prieto, G., Bilbao, L., Milanese, M.
Formato: JOUR
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_02630346_v35_n1_p26_RodriguezPrieto
Aporte de:
id todo:paper_02630346_v35_n1_p26_RodriguezPrieto
record_format dspace
spelling todo:paper_02630346_v35_n1_p26_RodriguezPrieto2023-10-03T15:12:40Z Exploding wire energy absorption dynamics at slow current rates Rodríguez Prieto, G. Bilbao, L. Milanese, M. Dark pause Energy absorption dynamics Exploding wires Energy absorption Kinetic energy Kinetics Absorption dynamics Charging voltage Dark pause Electrical current Electrical energy Experimental evidence Experimental investigations Initial kinetics Exploding wires Absorption of electrical energy provided to a metal wire in an exploding wire system is thought to be terminated or greatly diminished when the plasma is formed, after the joule heating of the metallic wire by the electrical current. Accordingly, it is common to account for the electrical energy delivered to the wire that the integration of current and voltage signals is halted when the voltage peak changes its slope. Usually, this moment is synchronized with the plasma appearance, as detected by optical sensors. In this work, experimental evidence of a two-step electrical energy absorption in an exploding wire surrounded by atmospheric air is presented. During the first step of the energy absorption the plasma is not formed, indicating that the delivered energy is not enough for ionizing the wire, giving place to a dark pause that lasts until a second energy absorption produces a plasma. The delay between the two steps can reach ≈2.2 s for copper wires of 50 m diameter charged at an initial voltage of 10 kV. Experimental investigation of variation of the delay between the two steps with different metals, charging voltages, and wire diameters are presented. A relation of the current density with the initial kinetic energy of the plasma and the electrical current rate is devised as a possible explanation of the observed phenomena. Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2016. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_02630346_v35_n1_p26_RodriguezPrieto
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Dark pause
Energy absorption dynamics
Exploding wires
Energy absorption
Kinetic energy
Kinetics
Absorption dynamics
Charging voltage
Dark pause
Electrical current
Electrical energy
Experimental evidence
Experimental investigations
Initial kinetics
Exploding wires
spellingShingle Dark pause
Energy absorption dynamics
Exploding wires
Energy absorption
Kinetic energy
Kinetics
Absorption dynamics
Charging voltage
Dark pause
Electrical current
Electrical energy
Experimental evidence
Experimental investigations
Initial kinetics
Exploding wires
Rodríguez Prieto, G.
Bilbao, L.
Milanese, M.
Exploding wire energy absorption dynamics at slow current rates
topic_facet Dark pause
Energy absorption dynamics
Exploding wires
Energy absorption
Kinetic energy
Kinetics
Absorption dynamics
Charging voltage
Dark pause
Electrical current
Electrical energy
Experimental evidence
Experimental investigations
Initial kinetics
Exploding wires
description Absorption of electrical energy provided to a metal wire in an exploding wire system is thought to be terminated or greatly diminished when the plasma is formed, after the joule heating of the metallic wire by the electrical current. Accordingly, it is common to account for the electrical energy delivered to the wire that the integration of current and voltage signals is halted when the voltage peak changes its slope. Usually, this moment is synchronized with the plasma appearance, as detected by optical sensors. In this work, experimental evidence of a two-step electrical energy absorption in an exploding wire surrounded by atmospheric air is presented. During the first step of the energy absorption the plasma is not formed, indicating that the delivered energy is not enough for ionizing the wire, giving place to a dark pause that lasts until a second energy absorption produces a plasma. The delay between the two steps can reach ≈2.2 s for copper wires of 50 m diameter charged at an initial voltage of 10 kV. Experimental investigation of variation of the delay between the two steps with different metals, charging voltages, and wire diameters are presented. A relation of the current density with the initial kinetic energy of the plasma and the electrical current rate is devised as a possible explanation of the observed phenomena. Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2016.
format JOUR
author Rodríguez Prieto, G.
Bilbao, L.
Milanese, M.
author_facet Rodríguez Prieto, G.
Bilbao, L.
Milanese, M.
author_sort Rodríguez Prieto, G.
title Exploding wire energy absorption dynamics at slow current rates
title_short Exploding wire energy absorption dynamics at slow current rates
title_full Exploding wire energy absorption dynamics at slow current rates
title_fullStr Exploding wire energy absorption dynamics at slow current rates
title_full_unstemmed Exploding wire energy absorption dynamics at slow current rates
title_sort exploding wire energy absorption dynamics at slow current rates
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_02630346_v35_n1_p26_RodriguezPrieto
work_keys_str_mv AT rodriguezprietog explodingwireenergyabsorptiondynamicsatslowcurrentrates
AT bilbaol explodingwireenergyabsorptiondynamicsatslowcurrentrates
AT milanesem explodingwireenergyabsorptiondynamicsatslowcurrentrates
_version_ 1807320972213092352