Todd619
Structural
- Jan 7, 2005
- 31
I am searching for insulator materials with the highest dielectric strength per thickness possible. The best ones I've found seem to be Teflon @ about 40-80 kV / mm (short time) and CPVC @ about 40 kV / mm (short time).
My problem is that all the values I find say "short time", but this is not going to be a "short time" kind of thing, so I'm trying to find where I can find the "long time" values.
I also would like any suggestions as far as other materials go. I would like to use something that is bondable (not Teflon)
The application is basically for a ion mass spectrometer. It will be two anode plates @ 50-100kV separated by just a few mm, on the other side the plates must be insulated from magnetic pole faces with neutral potential. The insulation must be kept thin so that the magnetic dipole gap can be small for a greater field across the gap.
I appreciate any feedback
-Todd
My problem is that all the values I find say "short time", but this is not going to be a "short time" kind of thing, so I'm trying to find where I can find the "long time" values.
I also would like any suggestions as far as other materials go. I would like to use something that is bondable (not Teflon)
The application is basically for a ion mass spectrometer. It will be two anode plates @ 50-100kV separated by just a few mm, on the other side the plates must be insulated from magnetic pole faces with neutral potential. The insulation must be kept thin so that the magnetic dipole gap can be small for a greater field across the gap.
I appreciate any feedback
-Todd