Surface micro-discharges on spacecraft dielectrics
Abstract
Extensive measurements on Teflon and Kapton in a scanning electron microscope indicate the existence of a well-defined family of surface micro-discharges characteristic of the dielectric material. For a given small region exposed to the 16-20 kV electron beam, the strongest discharge pulses are similar in shape and amplitude. For Teflon, typical pulse durations are 2-3 ns, rise and fall times are sometimes as low as 0.2 ns, current amplitudes are approximately 100 mA flowing down to the pedestal and the pulses are unidirectional with no ringing. The use of a rapid-scan electron microscope with a secondary-electron imaging system reveals complex charge distributions resembling Lichtenberg figures on a supposedly flat homogeneous dielectric surface. These patterns undergo extensive alteration at each micro-discharge pulse and indicate that both the charging and discharging processes are highly nonuniform over the dielectric surface. The use of floodbeam causes the occurrence of a large-scale macro-discharges, in which a typical peak current is 40 A with a duration of 120 ns.
- Publication:
-
Spacecraft Charging Technol. Conference
- Pub Date:
- February 1977
- Bibcode:
- 1977scct.conf..519B
- Keywords:
-
- Dielectrics;
- Electric Discharges;
- Spacecraft Charging;
- Surface Properties;
- Electron Microscopes;
- Kapton (Trademark);
- Measurement;
- Teflon (Trademark);
- Electronics and Electrical Engineering