Abstract:
High voltage insulators are the backbone of any power system network. They
can be defined as the devices which are used on transmission lines, transformers
and distribution substations to support, separate or contain current carrying
conductors at high voltage. All insulators have dual functions, mechanical and
electrical, which commonly present conflicting demands to the designer.
A major problem of these insulators is the accumulation of air borne
contamination on their surface. The major cause of pollutant accumulation on
the insulator surface is the high surface energy due to their strong electrostatic
bond among the various atoms in the material. The chief sources of
contamination are coastal areas, salt industries, cement industries, volcanic
activity areas, industrial burning and chemical industries. During a light rain or
fog or mist, these contaminations get moistened and thus, form a conducting
layer through which leakage current flows. Dry bands are formed as a
consequence of the warming-up of the insulation surface layer. Partial arc
appear throughout the dry bands which ultimately lead to surface flashover of
the insulator. Thus, complete breakdown of the power system .
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The main objective of present work was to synthesize nanostructured
dielectric hydrophobic thin films especially, Hafnium oxide (HfO2),
Hafnium oxynitride (HfOxNy), and Hafnium-titanium oxide (HfTiO) on
glass and Quartz substrates by DC/RF magnetron sputtering technique
and to investigate the effect of sputtering process parameters on
structural, optical, hydrophobic and electrical properties of these
materials in order to mitigate the problem of contamination. A chapterwise
summary of the thesis is given below.
Chapter 1 gives an overview about the high voltage insulators used in
electrical power system. It discusses the role of insulators and also the problem
of contamination being by these insulators. The surface flashover phenomenon
was described and its consequences were also highlighted. The economic loss
incurred due to contamination was also highlighted in this chapter. Various
mitigation techniques and their pros-cons has also been discussed in this
chapter. Nanotechnology based coatings was put forward as a effective
remedial measure and dielectric hydrophobic coating was suggested as a
solution to this problem. Hafnium based oxide, oxynitride and composite was
selected as a material to resolve this problem. Magnetron Sputtering was
selected as a synthesis technique method
Chapter 2 presents the details of synthesis and characterization techniques,
employed for the present research work. Section 2.1- A brief description as to
the thin film growth modes, influenced by the interaction energies of substrate
and film atoms is included in this section. Section 2.2 – The process
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description and mechanistic details of DC/RF magnetron sputtering technique
used for the deposition of thin films in the present work is discussed in this
section. Section 2.3- The methodology for the characterization of deposited
films by different techniques such as X-Ray Diffraction for the phase
identification and grain size, surface morphology of the films by using
techniques such as Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) and elemental analysis
using Electron Probe Microscopy (EPMA) and electron diffractin scattering
(EDS) are discussed. The hydrophobic properties of deposited films were
measured by water contact angle goniometer. The four probe measurement unit
and impedance analyser was used to measure electrical properties of the
sputter deposited thin films in the present work. UV-vis-NIR
spectrophotometer used for optical property measurement was also highlighted
in this chapter.
Chapter 3 describes the synthesis and characterization of hafnium oxide at
different sputtering Parameters. Section 3.1 give a brief introduction about the
hafnium oxide and discusses the work of different research group contributed
in synthesizing hafnium oxide by sputtering. Section 3.2 discusses the effect
of sputtering gas on structural, morphological, hydrophobic, optical and
electrical properties of deposited nanostructured hafnium oxide thin film over
glass insulators. All the deposited films were found to be hydrophobic as well
as dielectric. The argon gas was found to be optimum sputtering gas at a
O2/Ar=0.5. Section 3.3 discussed about the effect of sputtering pressure on
different properties of HfO2 films. The optimum pressure was obtained as 15m
Torr where the film was monoclinic crystalline, hydrophobic, dielectric and
possesses high resistivity of order 104 ohm-cm. Section 3.4 discusses the
different properties of HfO2 as sputtering power is varied from 30 to 60 W.
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Higher hydrophobicity was achieved at 50 and 60 W power with dielectric and
insulating characteristics. However, due to economical reason 50 W was
selected as a optimum power for HfO2 coatings. Section 3.5 deals with the
effect of substrate temperature on the structural, hydrophobic, optical and
electrical properties of HfO2 films. The temperature was varied from room to
500 °C and higher hydrophobicity and crystallinity was obtained at 500 °C but
the electrical resistivity was drastically reduced. Hence, 50 W, 15 mTorr, room
temperature was selected as a optimum sputtering parameter for hydrophobic
dielectric HfO2 coating over glass insulators. Section 3.6 deals with the
electrical breakdown study on uncoated glass and optimized coated glass. An
enhancement was obtained in the breakdown strength from 20 kV/mm to 23
kV/mm.
Chapter 4 presents in detail the synthesis and characterization details of
hafnium oxynitride films. Section 4.1 deals with the properties of hafnium
oxynitride and also highlights the work done by the various research group.
Section 4.2 describes the effect of sputtering gas and oxygen partial pressure on
the structural, morphological, hydrophobic and electrical property of HfOxNy.
The optimum parameter were obtained for Ar gas at 10% oxygen partial
pressure. Section 4.2 deals with the substrate temperature effect on different
properties of HfOxNy. The bi-phase characterization were obtained for all the
deposited films with higher hydrophobicity at 400 °C. However, the dielectric
constant and resistivity were less in comparison to the room temperature coated
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film. Thus, from technical as well as economical point of view, room
temperature was considered as optimum temperature. In section, 4.3 variation
of sputtering pressure was studied. The sputtering pressure was varied from 10
to 30 mTorr in steps of 5 mTorr. Higher hydrophobicity and resistivity was
obtained for 20 mTorr sputtering pressure. Section 4.4 describes the effect of
power on various properties of HfOxNy coated at room temperature. The power
was varied from 20 to 60 W. The optical, electrical and hydrophobic was same
and higher for power 50 and 60 W. Hence, 50 W power was considered as the
optimum economical power. Section 4.5 deals with electrical breakdown study
of uncoated and optimized coated glass insulator. The breakdown strength was
found to be 25 kV/mm which is slightly higher in comparison to the HfO2.
Chapter 5 deals with the synthesis and characterization of HfTiO
nanocomposite coating over glass substrate. Section 5.1 gives introduction
about nanocomposite coating. It also highlights the work of different research
group over HfTiO coating. Only two parameter were studied for
nanocomposite coating namely temperature and power. Section 5.2 deals with
the effect of temperature on hydrophobic, electrical and optical properties of
HfTiO coating. Higher hydrophobicity, large dielectric constant and less
resistivity were obtained at 500 °C temperature. Section 5.3 deals the variation
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of power of Ti target from 110 to 150 W in steps of 20 W keeping Hf target
power constant equals to 50 W. The coating were hydrophobic for all power.
The higher hydrophobicity and high dielectric properties were obtained at a
Ti power of 150 W. The contact angle was 107.6° and resistivity was also of
order 104 at this power. Section 5.4 describes the breakdown study of coated
and HfTiO coated glass insulators. The breakdown strength was 37 kV/cm for
optimized HfTiO coated glass.