VACUUM CIRCUIT BREAKER
20210233727 ยท 2021-07-29
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01H79/00
ELECTRICITY
H01H33/66261
ELECTRICITY
H01H33/6661
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A vacuum circuit breaker includes a vacuum circuit breaker tube having a vacuum housing in which a contact system is disposed. The contact system includes two contacts which are movable relative to one another. An electrical pre-arcing unit having an ignition electrode in the vacuum housing is provided for igniting an arc along an arc current path.
Claims
1-7 (canceled)
8. A vacuum circuit breaker, comprising: a vacuum circuit breaker tube having a vacuum housing; a contact system disposed in said a vacuum housing, said contact system having two contacts being movable relative to one another; an electrical pre-arcing unit for igniting an arc along an arc current path, said electrical pre-arcing unit being disposed in said vacuum housing and having an ignition electrode; said two contacts including first and second geometrically separated current paths, said first current path being said arc current path and said second current path being a continuous current path; said two contacts having finger-shaped extensions along a switching axis, said finger-shaped extensions of said two contacts engaging with one another, said finger-shaped extensions including flanks having contact surfaces of said arc current path, said contacts with said finger-shaped extensions being oriented along said switching axis; said continuous current path having contact surfaces making contact with one another in a closed state of the circuit breaker; and said contact surfaces of said arc current path not contacting one another in the closed state of the circuit breaker.
9. The vacuum circuit breaker according to claim 8, wherein at least one of said contacts has a pot-shaped configuration with a center, and said arc current path has a contact piece disposed in said center of said at least one pot-shaped contact.
10. The vacuum circuit breaker according to claim 8, wherein said arc current path has a contact piece including said ignition electrode.
11. The vacuum circuit breaker according to claim 8, including a vapor shield, said ignition electrode being disposed on said vapor shield.
12. The vacuum circuit breaker according to claim 8, wherein said contact surfaces of said arc current path have larger surface areas than said contact surfaces of said continuous current path.
13. The vacuum circuit breaker according to claim 12, wherein said surface areas of said contact surfaces of said arc current path are at least twice as large as said surface areas of said contact surfaces of said continuous current path.
14. A method for using a vacuum circuit breaker, the method comprising using the vacuum circuit breaker according to claim 8 as a short-circuiting device for shorting a circuit and for protecting a grid influencing system from a surge.
Description
[0017] Advantageous configurations of the invention and further features are described in more detail with reference to the figures that follow. These are schematic, purely exemplary configurations that do not constitute any limitation to the scope of protection. In the figures:
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
[0026]
[0027] The vacuum circuit breaker tube 2 has a housing 4, which, as already explained, is not depicted in
[0028] The contact system 5 has two contacts; in principle, both contacts could be configured as a moving contact, but normally only one contact 6 is configured as a moving contact and a second contact is a fixed contact 8. The moving contact 6 in this instance is connected to a drive, which is not depicted here.
[0029] The contacts 6 and 8 in
[0030] Furthermore, the vacuum circuit breaker tube is equipped with a pre-arcing device 10, wherein the pre-arcing device 10 has at least one ignition electrode 12 and preferably ignition electronics 20, which provide an electrical signal to the ignition electrode 12 in the event of a short circuit, when the switch needs to be closed very quickly. The effect of this is that electrical charges are present in the region of contact surfaces 24 for what is known as an arc current path 18, and a flashover in the form of an arc occurs between two contact surfaces 24. When a grid fault occurs, the contact is therefore first bridged by the arc 16 ignited as described. While the arc 16 conducts the current, the contacts 6 and 8 are then closed mechanically by the mechanical drive, resulting in contact between contact surfaces 26 of a continuous current path 22.
[0031] This sequence is therefore expedient because the arc 16 can be ignited more quickly (in less than 2 ms) and hence the current can flow via said arc for a short time until the somewhat slower mechanical contact is closed.
[0032] In this way, an effect similar to what is already the case from the combination of what is known as a spark gap with a circuit breaker in accordance with the prior art is achieved in an integrated switch. However, the design described requires a much smaller installation space; at the same time, the vacuum circuit breaker tube 2 is much less susceptible to environmental influences than what is known as a spark gap, for example.
[0033] In principle, it would be possible to geometrically combine the arc current path 18 and the continuous current path 22. That is to say, similarly to what is described in
[0034] For this reason, it is expedient that, as depicted in
[0035] In contrast to the prior art, in this case in an integrated manner in a switch, an arc is first switched, which arc leads very quickly to a flow of current until the slower mechanical switching process via the continuous current path is provided. In this case, the continuous current path 22 and the arc current path 18 are geometrically separated from one another, which can be fashioned by the arrangement of the fingerlike extensions 30. In the closed state of the contact system 5 the contact surfaces 24 for the arc current path 18 are not in contact with one another. Consequently, welding between the individual contact surfaces 24 of the arc current path does not occur either.
[0036] In a further embodiment, which is not depicted here, instead of straight fingerlike extensions 30 the extensions are helically inserted in one another. In this embodiment, the lateral surfaces of the contacts touch as a result of an axial movement. The current paths during the arc phase and the continuous current phase are almost identical in this embodiment. This helix, which is not depicted in this instance, may also be situated on a supporting structure, for example configured in the form of helical grooves on in each case a tube inside and a tube outside, which are inserted in one another. In principle, besides a helical shape, more complex geometric shapes of the fingerlike extensions 30 are also possible, for example in the form of dovetail structures.
[0037] In yet another embodiment, which is not depicted, the contacts of the contact system are closed by a rotational movement rather than by an axial movement. The contact shape in this instance can basically include all of the aforementioned shapes as well. The rotational movement can also merge into an axial movement in the case of helical contacts.
[0038]
[0039]
[0040]
[0041] Alternatively, the ignition electrode 12, as depicted in
[0042] When the vacuum circuit breaker tube described is used in an AC electricity grid, the pre-arcing device 10 should preferably be embodied such that bipolar pre-arcing is rendered possible. This would mean that the arc 16 does not automatically extinguish on passing through the current zero crossing, but rather that it is re-established again. Additionally, pre-arcing is possible both in the positive and in the negative current half-cycle. This can also be achieved by virtue of the contact system 5 having an ignition electrode 12 on both sides that corresponds to ignition electronics in each case or to common ignition electronics 20. Detection of the polarity of the grid or simultaneous ignition of both pre-arcing devices 10 allows the arc 16 to be ignited. A further option for bipolar ignition consists also in greatly increasing the ignition voltage, said ignition voltage being intended to be much higher than twice the grid amplitude, so that an arc is ignited even in the case of an opposite polarity.
[0043] In order to carry the current for longer than one half-cycle, for example in the case of slowly closing continuous current contacts, instead of using a second vacuum tube with opposite polarity it is possible to significantly reduce the turn-off capability of the contact system 5. This can be used as a tube for an AC current, since the current is not interrupted permanently after the zero crossing. This presupposes that the current has the correct polarity for the vacuum circuit breaker at the turn-on time.
[0044] Appropriate fast drives, preferably a bounce-free drive, are advantageous for the vacuum circuit breaker tube described. A bounce-free drive can be achieved in particular by buffer-storing the kinetic energy of the moving contact when it hits the fixed contact in a spring device, not depicted here, of the drive unit (this includes mechanical springs or gas compression springs).
LIST OF REFERENCE SIGNS
[0045] 2 vacuum circuit breaker tube
[0046] 4 vacuum housing
[0047] 5 contact system
[0048] 6 moving contact
[0049] 8 fixed contact
[0050] 10 pre-arcing device
[0051] 12 ignition electrode
[0052] 14 contact piece
[0053] 16 arc
[0054] 18 arc current path
[0055] 20 ignition electronics
[0056] 22 continuous current path
[0057] 24 arc current path contact surfaces
[0058] 26 continuous current path contact surfaces
[0059] 28 switching axis
[0060] 30 fingerlike extensions
[0061] 32 pot-shaped contact
[0062] 34 vapor shield
[0063] 36 flanks of the extensions