The Comparison Between Dielectric Frequency Response and Polarization and Depolarization Current Techniques for Investigating the Defected

dc.contributor.authorWinai Methavithit
dc.contributor.authorPittaya Pannil
dc.contributor.authorChaitawat Chuayin
dc.contributor.authorPhitthaya Aiamrungruang
dc.contributor.authorMatthieu Zinck
dc.contributor.authorSiwakorn Jeenmuang
dc.contributor.authorNorasage Pattanadech
dc.contributor.authorChanin Bunlaksananusorn
dc.date.accessioned2026-05-08T19:25:08Z
dc.date.issued2025-5-6
dc.description.abstractThis research shows the comparative study of Dielectric Frequency Response (DFR) andPolarization/Depolarization Current (PDC) techniques for detecting the degraded ZnO surge arresters. Four artificial defects (Excessive number of lightning current stress, cracking, moisture ingress, surface tracking) were simulated in 21-kV arresters. DFR analyzed dielectric parameters (capacitance, tan δ) across 1 mHz-1 kHz. Whereas the PDC experiment measured time-domain currents, which could be transformed to frequency-domain characteristics alongside time-domain analysis (DC resistance). Both methods effectively detected the degradation of the problem arrester. DFR provided broad spectral signatures, while PDC offered detailed low-frequency (< 0.1 Hz) insights linked to interfacial polarization. Moisture ingress consistently showed the most severe impact, causing significant deviations in dielectric properties, as observed by both techniques. Other defects also yielded distinct responses. Frequency domain results from DFR and PDC showed a good correlation. The study confirms DFR and PDC as sensitive, complementary diagnostic tools. DFR gives a wide-frequency overview, while PDC excels at low-frequency and polarization analysis. Their use, potentially combined with conventional methods, enhances arrester condition assessment and supports predictive maintenance.
dc.identifier.doi10.1109/iceast64767.2025.11088149
dc.identifier.urihttps://dspace.kmitl.ac.th/handle/123456789/19937
dc.subjectNon-Destructive Testing Techniques
dc.subjectGeophysical Methods and Applications
dc.subjectGeophysical and Geoelectrical Methods
dc.titleThe Comparison Between Dielectric Frequency Response and Polarization and Depolarization Current Techniques for Investigating the Defected
dc.typeArticle

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