As described in this paper, we proposed the adoption of polyacrylic acid (PAA) with H2O, which becomes PAA + H2O mixture gel, as an ablation medium for arc quenching in a low-voltage DC circuit breaker. It is well known that H2O is a highly arc-quenching medium, but it has been difficult to use H2O in liquid phase directly as an arc-quenching medium. The arc performance of PAA + H2O mixture gel was studied using numerical and experimental approaches. Numerical thermofluid simulation was conducted to obtain the arc temperature and gas flow distribution at different H2O mixing ratios in PAA + H2O gel. To consider ablation of PAA + H2O gel, a method of alternately arranging PAA and H2O in the ablation wall was also proposed. Calculation results demonstrate that increasing the H2O mixing ratio in PAA + H2O mixture gel makes the arc narrower in the temperature and electrical conductivity distributions. The experimentally obtained results also indicate that arcs confined in PAA + H2O mixture gel with higher H2O mixture become narrower than those in PAA or other materials. Moreover, arcs confined by PAA + H2O mixture gel with higher H2O mixing ratio enhance the arc resistance rapidly. The results suggest that PAA + H2O mixture gel can have higher arc-quenching performance than pure polymers.
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