Paschen's law is an equation that gives the breakdown voltage, that is, the voltage necessary to start a discharge or electric arc, between two electrodes in a gas as a function of pressure and gap length.[1] [2] It is named after Friedrich Paschen who discovered it empirically in 1889.
Paschen studied the breakdown voltage of various gases between parallel metal plates as the gas pressure and gap distance were varied:
For a given gas, the voltage is a function only of the product of the pressure and gap length. The curve he found of voltage versus the pressure-gap length product (right) is called Paschen's curve. He found an equation that fit these curves, which is now called Paschen's law.
At higher pressures and gap lengths, the breakdown voltage is approximately proportional to the product of pressure and gap length, and the term Paschen's law is sometimes used to refer to this simpler relation.[3] However, this is only roughly true, over a limited range of the curve.
Early vacuum experimenters found a rather surprising behavior. An arc would sometimes take place in a long irregular path rather than at the minimal distance between the electrodes. For example, in air, at a pressure of one atmosphere, the distance for minimal breakdown voltage is about 7.5 μm. The voltage required to arc this distance is 327 V, which is insufficient to ignite the arcs for gaps that are either wider or narrower. For a 3.5 μm gap, the required voltage is 533 V, nearly twice as much. If 500 V were applied, it would not be sufficient to arc at the 2.85 μm distance, but would arc at a 7.5 μm distance.
Paschen found that breakdown voltage was described by the equation[4]
VB=
Bpd | |||||
|
where
VB
p
d
\gammase
A
E/p
B
A
B
\alpha=Ape-Bp/E
E/p
E/p
A
B
The graph of this equation is the Paschen curve. By differentiating it with respect to
pd
pd=
| ||||||
\right)}{A} |
and predicts the occurrence of a minimal breakdown voltage for
pd
The composition of the gas determines both the minimal arc voltage and the distance at which it occurs. For argon, the minimal arc voltage is 137 V at a larger 12 μm. For sulfur dioxide, the minimal arc voltage is 457 V at only 4.4 μm.
For air at standard conditions for temperature and pressure (STP), the voltage needed to arc a 1-metre gap is about 3.4 MV.[6] The intensity of the electric field for this gap is therefore 3.4 MV/m.
The electric field needed to arc across the minimal-voltage gap is much greater than what is necessary to arc a gap of one metre. At large gaps (or large pd) Paschen's Law is known to fail. The Meek Criteria for breakdown is usually used for large gaps.[7] It takes into account non-uniformity in the electric field and formation of streamers due to the build up of charge within the gap that can occur over long distances. For a 7.5 μm gap the arc voltage is 327 V, which is 43 MV/m. This is about 14 times greater than the field strength for the 1.5-metre gap. The phenomenon is well verified experimentally and is referred to as the Paschen minimum.
The equation loses accuracy for gaps under about 10 μm in air at one atmosphere[8] and incorrectly predicts an infinite arc voltage at a gap of about 2.7 micrometres. Breakdown voltage can also differ from the Paschen curve prediction for very small electrode gaps, when field emission from the cathode surface becomes important.
The mean free path of a molecule in a gas is the average distance between its collision with other molecules. This is inversely proportional to the pressure of the gas, given constant temperature. In air at STP the mean free path of molecules is about 96 nm. Since electrons are much smaller, their average distance between colliding with molecules is about 5.6 times longer, or about 0.5 μm. This is a substantial fraction of the 7.5 μm spacing between the electrodes for minimal arc voltage. If the electron is in an electric field of 43 MV/m, it will be accelerated and acquire 21.5 eV of energy in 0.5 μm of travel in the direction of the field. The first ionization energy needed to dislodge an electron from nitrogen molecule is about 15.6 eV. The accelerated electron will acquire more than enough energy to ionize a nitrogen molecule. This liberated electron will in turn be accelerated, which will lead to another collision. A chain reaction then leads to avalanche breakdown, and an arc takes place from the cascade of released electrons.[9]
More collisions will take place in the electron path between the electrodes in a higher-pressure gas. When the pressure–gap product
pd
Collisions reduce the electron's energy and make it more difficult for it to ionize a molecule. Energy losses from a greater number of collisions require larger voltages for the electrons to accumulate sufficient energy to ionize many gas molecules, which is required to produce an avalanche breakdown.
On the left side of the Paschen minimum, the
pd
To calculate the breakthrough voltage, a homogeneous electrical field is assumed. This is the case in a parallel-plate capacitor setup. The electrodes may have the distance
d
x=0
To get impact ionization, the electron energy
Ee
EI
x
\alpha
\alpha
\Gammae
(So the number of free electrons at the anode is equal to the number of free electrons at the cathode that were multiplied by impact ionization. The larger
d
\alpha
The number of created electrons is
Neglecting possible multiple ionizations of the same atom, the number of created ions is the same as the number of created electrons:
\Gammai
where
\gamma
\Gammai(d)=0
What is the amount of
\alpha
P
\sigma
A
As expressed by the second part of the equation, it is also possible to express the probability as relation of the path traveled by the electron
x
λ
N
(
p
V
kB
T
The adjoining sketch illustrates that
\sigma=\pi(ra+
2 | |
r | |
b) |
rI
\sigma=\pi
2 | |
r | |
I |
λ
where the factor
L
The alteration of the current of not yet collided electrons at every point in the path
x
This differential equation can easily be solved:
The probability that
λ>x
x
According to its definition
\alpha
It was hereby considered that the energy
E
l{E}
Q
For the parallel-plate capacitor we have
l{E}=
U | |
d |
U
Q
e
Putting this into (5) and transforming to
U
Ubreakdown
with
Plasma ignition in the definition of Townsend (Townsend discharge) is a self-sustaining discharge, independent of an external source of free electrons. This means that electrons from the cathode can reach the anode in the distance
d
\alpha
If
\alphad=1
Paschen's law requires that:
\Gammae(x=0)\ne0
\gamma
Different gases will have different mean free paths for molecules and electrons. This is because different molecules have ionization cross sections, that is, different effective diameters. Noble gases like helium and argon are monatomic, which makes them harder to ionize and tend to have smaller effective diameters. This gives them greater mean free paths.
Ionization potentials differ between molecules, as well as the speed that they recapture electrons after they have been knocked out of orbit. All three effects change the number of collisions needed to cause an exponential growth in free electrons. These free electrons are necessary to cause an arc.