22–28 Jun 2019
DoubleTree at the Entrance to Universal Orlando
America/New_York timezone

DESIGN AND TESTING OF A COMPACT 40 KV CAPACITOR BASED ON NANODIELECTRIC COMPOSITES*

24 Jun 2019, 16:45
15m
Gold Coast III/IV (Double Tree at the Entrance to Universal)

Gold Coast III/IV

Double Tree at the Entrance to Universal

Speaker

Kevin O'Connor (NanoElectromagnetics LLC)

Description

Compact pulsed power systems are often limited by the size and shape of the capacitors required for high voltage energy storage. Marx banks, pulse forming networks, and other devices requiring multiple capacitors are larger than necessary due to the size and shape of the capacitors as well as the geometry of the connection terminals. The size and weight of the capacitor are determined by the energy density of the capacitor dielectric and the dielectric strength of the surrounding insulation. While doorknob-style capacitors are commonly implemented in these devices, the cylindrical shape does not permit efficient packing of multiple capacitors to fill the available volume. Alternative capacitors, such as those based on mica films, have an improved form factor but have end terminations that add inductance in many assemblies. A new effort is addressing these design issues by building the capacitor upon nanodielectric composites. The nanodielectric composites combine high dielectric constant ceramic particles with low dielectric constant, high dielectric strength polymers to produce materials with both high dielectric constant and high dielectric strength. The combination of these two properties enables higher energy densities than possible with conventional ceramics. The composite materials can also be formed or machined into complex shapes to improve capacitor packing density while maintaining low inductance connection points. This effort is focused on development of 40 kV, 2.5 nF capacitors for compact capacitor banks in a vehicle stopping system. In this contribution, the tradeoffs are discussed with the design and simulated performance. The test requirements are described, and preliminary test data is analyzed.

  • This effort was sponsored by the U.S. Government under the DoD Ordnance Technology Consortium (DOTC) Other Transaction Agreement (OTA) (W15QKN-18-9-1008) with the National Armaments Consortium (NAC). The U.S. Government is authorized to reproduce and distribute reprints for Government purposes notwithstanding any copyright notation herein.

Authors

Kevin O'Connor (NanoElectromagnetics LLC) Dr Robert Kutz (NanoElectromagnetics, LLC) Mr Milton Miranda (NanoElectromagetics, LLC) Dr Mark Prelas (University of Missouri Center for Physical and Power Electronics) Randy Curry (University of Missouri)

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