Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#22
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Richard Clark wrote: On Sat, 14 Aug 2004 01:08:12 GMT, Dave Shrader SNIP h, but let's get extravagant and say 0.1%; then both strikes express all of 150 milli-watt-seconds of power. Richard, I'm not going to try to out calculate you. But, please tell the group what the junction temperature of any semiconductor device is at transient thermal failure at 0.1 and 1.0 useconds. Twenty years ago the USAF test data indicated that failure occurred at 0.5 microjoules!!! That's 300,000 times more sensitive than your numbers. Note, it is extremely difficult to really achieve a 0.001 ohm mechanical interconnect. Secondly, the major electronic failure mode is from the coupling of the magnetic field. A di/dt of 10^5/[1E-6] yields a value of 10^11 amperes/second. A one foot length of wire has a self inductance of approximately one nanohenry [1*10^[-9]] and the di/dt impact is ... 100 volts peak from one end of the wire to the next. Back in the olden days, twenty years ago, the action integral, that you calculated was sufficient to burn a 0.5 inch diameter hole right through titanium that was 0.1 inch thick. Note: the titanium alloy we used melts at slightly below 2000 degree F. The design issue is TRANSIENT THERMAL EFFECTS not average heating. At 1 microsecond the heat flow from the stressed area has not started. The USAF required adiabatic heating as the peak temperature for the starting condition for the transient thermal analysis. Restated, all the energy is converted to instantaneous heat and then the thermal stress analysis would be performed under that constraint. Conclusion, lightning is a highly stressful environment. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
30ft Tower uprooting | Antenna | |||
Advice Needed for Super J-Pole Design: Inductive Loops Overheating | Antenna | |||
EZ Way tower sheared hinge pin conclusion(?) | Antenna | |||
EZ Way tower sheared hinge pin | Antenna |