Streamer branching in liquid dielectrics is driven by stochastic and deterministic factors. The presence of stochastic causes of streamer branching such as inhomogeneities inherited from noisy initial states, impurities, or charge carrier density fluctuations is inevitable in any dielectric. A fully three-dimensional streamer model presented in this paper indicates that deterministic origins of branching are intrinsic attributes of streamers, which in some cases make the branching inevitable depending on shape and velocity of the volume charge at the streamer frontier. Specifically, any given inhomogeneous perturbation can result in streamer branching if the volume charge layer at the original streamer head is relatively thin and slow enoug...
International audienceThis paper presents a synthetic review of the state of knowledge relative to t...
Earlier work by Fowler, Davaney, and Hagedorn showed that the morphology of an anode streamer could ...
Electric discharges and streamers in liquids typically proceed through vapour phase channels produce...
Recent work shows that the range of morphology of anode streamers in liquid dielectric breakdown is ...
Propagation of positive streamers in dielectric liquids, modeled by the electron avalanche mechanism...
Abstract—The branching of streamers in atmospheric-pressure air, dense gases, and liquids is a commo...
Fully coupled self-consistent model of streamer branching is presented. The model incorporates inhom...
Many previous studies of electric breakdowns in dielectric liquids in point-plane geometry have exam...
The branching of electric discharge streamers in atmospheric pressure air, dense gases and liquids i...
Simulations of the growth of streamers using a model based on the stochastic growth of a branching f...
Branching is an essential element of streamer discharge dynamics. We review the current state of the...
The branching of streamers in high pressure gas discharges and discharges in liquids is an almost un...
This study presents self-consistent models of streamer growth using an equivalent electrical network...
Streamer electrical discharges are often investigated with computer simulations of density models (a...
International audienceOur purpose is to present a critical review of the current understanding of st...
International audienceThis paper presents a synthetic review of the state of knowledge relative to t...
Earlier work by Fowler, Davaney, and Hagedorn showed that the morphology of an anode streamer could ...
Electric discharges and streamers in liquids typically proceed through vapour phase channels produce...
Recent work shows that the range of morphology of anode streamers in liquid dielectric breakdown is ...
Propagation of positive streamers in dielectric liquids, modeled by the electron avalanche mechanism...
Abstract—The branching of streamers in atmospheric-pressure air, dense gases, and liquids is a commo...
Fully coupled self-consistent model of streamer branching is presented. The model incorporates inhom...
Many previous studies of electric breakdowns in dielectric liquids in point-plane geometry have exam...
The branching of electric discharge streamers in atmospheric pressure air, dense gases and liquids i...
Simulations of the growth of streamers using a model based on the stochastic growth of a branching f...
Branching is an essential element of streamer discharge dynamics. We review the current state of the...
The branching of streamers in high pressure gas discharges and discharges in liquids is an almost un...
This study presents self-consistent models of streamer growth using an equivalent electrical network...
Streamer electrical discharges are often investigated with computer simulations of density models (a...
International audienceOur purpose is to present a critical review of the current understanding of st...
International audienceThis paper presents a synthetic review of the state of knowledge relative to t...
Earlier work by Fowler, Davaney, and Hagedorn showed that the morphology of an anode streamer could ...
Electric discharges and streamers in liquids typically proceed through vapour phase channels produce...