4.7 Article

Towards a Kinetic Modeling of the Changes in the Electrical Properties of Cable Insulation during Radio-Thermal Ageing in Nuclear Power Plants. Application to Silane-Crosslinked Polyethylene

Journal

POLYMERS
Volume 13, Issue 24, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym13244427

Keywords

silane-crosslinked polyethylene; radio-thermal oxidation; analytical kinetic model; density; electrical properties; structural end-of-life criterion; lifetime prediction

Funding

  1. Euratom research and training program [755183]

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This study investigated the radio-thermal ageing of silane-crosslinked polyethylene, revealing ketones as the main oxidation products. An analytical kinetic model was developed to predict density increase and adverse changes in electrical properties, resulting in a lifetime extension of at least two times compared to conventional methods.
The radio-thermal ageing of silane-crosslinked polyethylene (Si-XLPE) was studied in air under different gamma dose rates (6.0, 8.5, 77.8, and 400 Gy & BULL;h(-1)) at different temperatures (21, 47, and 86 & DEG;C). The changes in the physico-chemical and electrical properties of Si-XLPE throughout its exposure were determined using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy coupled with chemical gas derivatization, hydrostatic weighing, differential scanning calorimetry, dielectric spectroscopy and current measurements under an applied electric field. From a careful analysis of the oxidation products, it was confirmed that ketones are the main oxidation products in Si-XLPE. The analytical kinetic model for radio-thermal oxidation was thus completed with relatively simple structure-property relationships in order to additionally predict the increase in density induced by oxidation, and the adverse changes in two electrical properties of Si-XLPE: the dielectric constant epsilon & PRIME; and volume resistivity R. After having shown the reliability of these new kinetic developments, the lifetime of Si-XLPE was determined using a dielectric end-of-life criterion deduced from a literature compilation on the changes in R with epsilon & PRIME; for common polymers. The corresponding lifetime was found to be at least two times longer than the lifetime previously determined with the conventional end-of-life criterion, i.e., the mechanical type, thus confirming the previous literature studies that had shown that fracture properties degrade faster than electrical properties.

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