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Review of surface flashover theory

Anderson, Richard E.

Over the past several decades, many researchers have contributed to present understanding of the flashover of electrically stressed insulators in vacuum, and a wealth of theories have been proposed to explain the many surprising attributes of this complex breakdown mechanism. Surface flashover appears to comprise at least two distinct phenomena which can be distinguished as being cathode-initiated or anode-initiated, with the former having received by far the most attention. Several models describing cathode-initiated flashover have been built on the pioneering work of Boersch and coworkers, published in 1963, and credit the breakdown mechanism to the action of an intense secondary-electron-emission avalanche on the insulator surface. Other researchers consider the electron avalanche to be only partially, if at all, responsible, and invoke various hot-carrier effects in the insulator bulk, the surface interfacial region, or in a layer of gas adsorbed on the insulator surface. Anode-initiated flashover, which contends with the cathode-initiated variety for the breakdown of insulators of conventional design, is thought to involve bulk breakdown in a way related to treeing failure. In spite of the considerable effort applied to understanding vacuum surface flashover, no single theory appears capable of explaining all the data, and new and often unexpected observations continue to be made. 42 refs., 6 figs.