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Short-circuit current breaking inside a circuit-breaker chamber involves phenomena ranging from plasma fluid dynamics to mechanical destruction. A multi-physics macroscopic simulation tool can be used to model what is happening to improve circuit-breaker design.
Modelling is very important for circuit-breaker development since it makes it possible to study different configurations before tests and investigate specific behaviour. A modern high voltage circuit breaker is a lot easier to describe than to model: separate two contacts in a gas with good dielectric properties; an arc forms and carries the current; blast this arc with the gas to cool it and quickly extinguish the arc. The difficulties come from the fact that we are dealing here with a complex system where multiple nonlinear physical processes are occurring and interacting simultaneously, including phase changes, convection, conduction and radiation. And all that in a small module with moving parts where arc temperatures can reach 20,000 °C and pressure can be over 100 atmospheres (10 MPa).
Despite improvements in computing power and software, simulating precisely what is happening inside the circuit breaker is usually very time consuming. A new modelling approach from Alstom is changing that. AMASIS (Arc Model for AMESim Interrupting Simulation) is a macroscopic model of the core of the circuit-breaker chamber that can perform a simulation in only five minutes.
On the left : Microscopic modeling ; On the right : Macroscopic modeling
The AMESim part refers to the commercial software for modelling multi-domain systems from LMS Imagine.Lab on which the Alstom application is based. In AMESim, models are described using nonlinear time-dependent analytical equations that represent the system’s hydraulic, pneumatic, thermal, electric or mechanical behaviour. Standard AMESim modules are used to model the different parts of the circuit breaker other than the core, with AMASIS concentrating on the zone of influence of the electric arc itself.
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