Dear Dave,

You are working on a difficult issue.

Every HV relay will breakdown before the contacts touch. The reason is
as follows:
   When the contacts come closer the surface field strength
   Increases. The field strength will increase so much, such
   that the field emission current reaches current densities
   sufficient to melt the surface material. This melting
   surface material will create a conductive path. The process
   is called Explosive Electron Emission and takes place
   in Vacuum and in gas filled relays.

   Now there are some particularities for gas filled relays.
   i the pressure of the gas is not that high, the field
   eission or other processes might initiate a gas breakdown.
    
   At least for high pressure relays and for Vacuum relays, 
   nrmally the breakdown is caused by surface explosions.

Now, after the initial breakdown and some current the arc might
extinguish again. This will show up as "bouncing" in the current pulse
and times of 50 to a few hundred nanoseconds are typically. There are
many influencing factors, some of them are:
   - Speed of approach of the electrodes
   - External current
   - Gas filling
   - Surface materials 

After the contact meet, the contacts might bounce, leading to
interruptions or changes in the current in the us or ms range.

Regarding the "Vacuum breakdown strength". There is no 
'Vacuum breakdown", it is all a surface process.

In general, I suggest to think about using N2-SF6 filled relays. The
HC-5 from Kilovac is a good choice up to about 10 kV, if mounted in
epoxy. You can reduce the drive current or shape the drive current to
reduce the problem of bouncing.

David Pommerenke
University Missouri Rolla



From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2003 11:09 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: HV relay


I'm designing some ESD test equipment for in-house use and need some
suggestions on relays. I am experimenting with a 5 kV COTO vacuum relay
and notice that I get some "runt" pulses. It appears that the contacts
arc before they touch and then the arc extinguishes after 50 ns and then
reignites. About half the time it the contacts appear to make physical
contact before arcing. If I remember correctly, the strength of a hard
vacuum is 200 kV/cm. So, at 5 kV the contacts can arc when they are 25
microns apart (actually further apart due to field enhancement). Are
there any vacuum relays that do not exhibit runt pulses?

    Dave Cuthbert
    Micron Technology



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