E-Field Breakdown: Realistic Values in Air & FR4

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The realistic breakdown value for the electric field in air is debated, with textbooks citing 3*10^6 V/m and some websites suggesting 1*10^6 V/m. The presence of dielectrics like FR4 can increase breakdown values, and the equation V=ε E*d is applicable, depending on conditions such as humidity and pressure. The Paschen Curve is referenced for understanding how breakdown voltage varies with these factors. Breakdown voltage also differs based on geometry, such as sharp points versus spheres, and is only slightly affected by humidity unless condensation occurs. Understanding these variations is crucial for meeting standards set by organizations like UL.
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What is the realistic break down value for E field in air.
Text books say its 3*10^6 V/m
But there are many websites, which go down to 1*10^6 V/m.

If there is a dielectric like FR4, then the break down increases
V=ε E*d ?, where ε is the dielectric constant for FR4.
 
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likephysics said:
What is the realistic break down value for E field in air.
Text books say its 3*10^6 V/m
But there are many websites, which go down to 1*10^6 V/m.

If there is a dielectric like FR4, then the break down increases
V=ε E*d ?, where ε is the dielectric constant for FR4.

It varies with pressure -- the relevant reference is the Paschen Curve:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paschen_curve

(Click on the graph to enlarge it)
 
Assuming standard temp/pressure, is V=ε E*d valid ?
 
It depend on humidity also.
 
yungman said:
It depend on humidity also.

Yes! Given a constant humidity, is V=ε E*d valid ?
 
The book
Reference Data for Radio Engineers, fifth edition has a great graph for breakdown voltage.
If you are serious about working with high voltage, you should get this book.
Volts/mil breakdown voltage varies with spacing.
Breakdown voltage varies with pressure and temperature.
Breakdown voltage is different for sharp points and spheres.
Breakdown voltage varies only slightly with humidity unless there is condensation.
 
Carl Pugh said:
The book
Reference Data for Radio Engineers, fifth edition has a great graph for breakdown voltage.
If you are serious about working with high voltage, you should get this book.
Volts/mil breakdown voltage varies with spacing.
Breakdown voltage varies with pressure and temperature.
Breakdown voltage is different for sharp points and spheres.
Breakdown voltage varies only slightly with humidity unless there is condensation.

Thanks for the book suggestion. I will look it up.
I am not working with high voltage, but need the breakdown information.
Certain products need to meet standards set by UL (underwriter labs). Some of these standards are a mystery. Lot of ppl at work think breakdown voltage calculation(even under standard conditions) is some what blackmagic.
 
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