Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10397/113408
Title: Influences of typical forest vegetation combustion processes on breakdown characteristics and mechanisms of wire-wire air gaps
Authors: Chen, G
You, F
Chen, S
Zhang, Y
Li, X
Wang, Z
Huang, X 
Shen, Z
Fu, Z
Zhu, G
Wang, Z
Issue Date: Sep-2025
Source: Fire safety journal, Sept 2025, v. 155, 104431
Abstract: Worldwide, high voltage transmission lines have been suffering from frequent tripping accidents caused by wildfires. To further investigates the impacts of wildfire on breakdown characteristics and mechanisms of wire-wire air gaps, three typical forest vegetation samples were used as simulated fire sources in this work. Two segments of aluminum conductors steel reinforced (ACSR) were used as electrodes. The main flame characteristics, mass loss rate (MLR), and heat release rate (HRR) of the vegetation, main discharge breakdown characteristics of the wire-wire gap distances (5.0–25.0 cm) with fire, and the arc evolution processes under flame conditions were measured and analyzed. Results show that fir has the highest combustion intensity. In both flame zones, the wire-wire air gaps of fir are all the most prone to discharge breakdowns, except for a 5 cm gap in oscillating flame zone. Eucalyptus always shows a medium difficulty. The mean breakdown field strengths of eucalyptus, thatch and fir in continuous and oscillating flame zones decrease sequentially by 78.02 %–84.67 % and 46.51 %–53.67 % respectively compared to that in pure air. Mechanism analyses indicate that high temperatures, ionized particles, thermal convection, radiation, flame zones and electric field interactions are the primary driving forces, reducing gap insulation, and ultimately leading to breakdown.
Keywords: Air gap discharge breakdown mechanism
Continuous flame zone
High voltage transmission line
Oscillating flame zone
Vegetation combustion flame
Wildfire
Publisher: Elsevier Ltd
Journal: Fire safety journal 
ISSN: 0379-7112
EISSN: 1873-7226
DOI: 10.1016/j.firesaf.2025.104431
Appears in Collections:Journal/Magazine Article

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