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18.08.2010 Siemens is searching for insulators that will make generators
more efficient. The electrical energy in generators is generated in
copper bars insulated against high electrical voltages with thick
layers of plastic. New materials would enable a thinner design for
these insulators, freeing up space for thicker bars in which ultimately
more energy could be generated. That would make it
relatively easy to adapt a generator to a more powerful turbine.
Siemens Corporate Technology (CT) is working with Siemens
Energy and additional industry and research partners to develop
new insulators containing nanoparticles. As reported in the current
issue of Pictures of the Future, the materials have already
proven effective in the laboratory. The next step is to ready the
technology for the market.
The voltage between the copper bars of a generator can be in
the tens of thousands of volts. This ionizes the air, leading to
partial discharges. The lighting flashes attack the copper conductor’s
insulation and produce erosion channels that propagate in
the protective coating. If they reach the metal, these channels
can trigger short circuits. This is why particles of mica, a special
silicate, are added to the plastic used for the insulator. Because
the erosion channels have to go around the tiny scales of mica, it
takes longer for them to reach the copper, and the insulator can
withstand continuously higher voltages.
The Siemens CT researchers and their partners are studying the
insulating effect of nanoparticles made of silicates. Measuring
just a few millionths of a millimeter, the tiny balls have an extremely
large surface area and lengthen the detour for the erosion
channels tremendously. Insulators to which the nanoparticles
have been added in addition to the mica scales exhibit
up to ten times greater resistance to partial discharges in the
laboratory. For their next step, the researchers hope to use such
nanoinsulators to make the insulation layers, some of which are
centimeters thick, roughly 25 percent thinner.
Siemens CT coordinated the work as part of the NanoIso project,
which was funded by the German Ministry of Education and
Research and concluded in March. The insulators will be further
refined and tested in a prototype generator over the course of a
four-year follow up project scheduled to begin in August.
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