Diffusion Properties of Gas Molecules in Oil–Paper Insulation System Based on Molecular Dynamics Simulation
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Molecular Dynamics Simulation
2.1. Model Establishment
- (1)
- The Forcite/Geometry Optimization module is used to perform geometric optimization on each unit. The cutoff radius was set to 12.5 Å.
- (2)
- The internal relaxation of the model. In the first place, the Forcite/Geometry Optimization module is used to minimize the energy of the entire system. Then, in order to stabilize the total energy of the model and adjust the density of the model, the Forcite/Dynamics is used under the isothermal and isobaric ensemble (NPT) at 298 K, the processing time is set as 100 ps and the pressure is set as 0.01 Gpa–0.0001 GPa. After the entire model system reaches stability, the optimized density of the insulation oil molecule model is approximately 0.83 g/cm3, the insulation paper model’s density is around 1.2 g/cm3, and the oil–paper insulation system model’s density is approximately 0.95 g/cm3, all close to the actual densities. This result proves that the whole simulation process is effective. The equilibrium state oil–paper insulation model before molecular dynamics processing is shown in Figure 2, Figure 3 and Figure 4.
- (3)
- The Forcite/Dynamics module is used to perform molecular dynamics simulations of liquid systems. Electrostatic and Van der Waals, respectively, are set to Ewald- and Atom-based calculations. The temperature is set to the normal operating temperature of the transformer, which is 343 K. The canonical ensemble (NVT) is used in molecular dynamics and the simulation time is 100 ps, with data collected every 1 ps for the entire trajectory of molecular dynamics.
2.2. Simulation Results and Analysis
3. Discussions
- (1)
- The gas molecules exhibit continuous “jumping” motion characteristics in three insulating mediums. The migration displacement of gas molecules in the oil–paper composite insulation is generally smaller than that in cellulose, and the motion migration displacement in insulating oil is the largest. This difference is most obvious in the motion displacement trajectory of H2. The transition displacement of the six gas molecules except H2 are not significantly different in the same insulating medium, and the MSD curves have crossovers. The different properties of insulating materials have an important impact on the transition motion of gas molecules.
- (2)
- The diffusion coefficient of characteristic gas molecules is highest in insulating oil, followed by cellulose. In oil–paper composite insulation systems, the diffusion coefficient is minimal. The diffusion coefficient of H2 is the largest among the three insulating mediums. The differences in diffusion coefficients of other gas molecules among various mediums are relatively small, and there is no absolute regularity in the ranking of diffusion coefficients among different mediums. Due to differences in molecular structure, different insulating materials will hinder the diffusion of gas molecules to varying degrees.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Main Components | C20H42 | C20H38 | C20H26 |
---|---|---|---|
Content proportion | Around 60% | 10–40% | 5–15% |
Gas Molecules | C2H2 | C2H4 | C2H6 | CH4 | H2 | CO | CO2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
a | 0.49962 | 0.20772 | 0.24419 | 0.81177 | 17.87845 | 0.03019 | 0.03503 |
R2 | 0.98109 | 0.99334 | 0.93657 | 0.98948 | 0.99384 | 0.96189 | 0.85117 |
D (Å2/s) | 0.08327 | 0.03462 | 0.040698 | 0.135295 | 2.979742 | 0.005032 | 0.005838 |
Gas Molecules | C2H2 | C2H4 | C2H6 | CH4 | H2 | CO | CO2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
a | 0.06096 | 0.28352 | 0.07723 | 0.16114 | 2.95479 | 0.42381 | 0.13473 |
R2 | 0.94855 | 0.86356 | 0.96678 | 0.90714 | 0.98375 | 0.98264 | 0.98612 |
D (Å2/s) | 0.01016 | 0.047253 | 0.012872 | 0.026857 | 0.492465 | 0.070635 | 0.022455 |
Gas Molecules | C2H2 | C2H4 | C2H6 | CH4 | H2 | CO | CO2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
a | 0.04036 | 0.03755 | 0.00106 | 0.03373 | 0.19665 | 0.02107 | 0.02065 |
R2 | 0.90097 | 0.83083 | 0.01092 | 0.97429 | 0.90467 | 0.69893 | 0.69548 |
D (Å2/s) | 0.006727 | 0.006258 | 0.000177 | 0.005622 | 0.032775 | 0.003512 | 0.003442 |
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Tao, J.; Zhan, H.; Luo, C.; Hu, S.; Duan, X.; Liao, M. Diffusion Properties of Gas Molecules in Oil–Paper Insulation System Based on Molecular Dynamics Simulation. Energies 2024, 17, 3811. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17153811
Tao J, Zhan H, Luo C, Hu S, Duan X, Liao M. Diffusion Properties of Gas Molecules in Oil–Paper Insulation System Based on Molecular Dynamics Simulation. Energies. 2024; 17(15):3811. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17153811
Chicago/Turabian StyleTao, Jia, Hao Zhan, Chuanxian Luo, Shengnan Hu, Xiongying Duan, and Minfu Liao. 2024. "Diffusion Properties of Gas Molecules in Oil–Paper Insulation System Based on Molecular Dynamics Simulation" Energies 17, no. 15: 3811. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17153811
APA StyleTao, J., Zhan, H., Luo, C., Hu, S., Duan, X., & Liao, M. (2024). Diffusion Properties of Gas Molecules in Oil–Paper Insulation System Based on Molecular Dynamics Simulation. Energies, 17(15), 3811. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17153811