Air Breakdown
The charge redistribution associated with an ESD event
usually, although not always, includes an air discharge because the event itself
lasts only nanoseconds, but most physical movement of electronic products occurs
on much longer time scales. It is, therefore, useful to discuss air
breakdown.
If an increasing voltage is developed between two fixed spheres in
air, a point will be reached beyond which the air ionizes between the two
spheres, and a spark travels between them. The electric field strength at which
this initial breakdown occurs is dependent upon several factors, including the
humidity and motion of the air and the surface roughness of the spheres, but may
be conservatively estimated at approximately 1 million volts per meter. (In most
cases, it is somewhat less, but it varies greatly and this value is sufficiently
accurate for the purposes at hand.) If the distance between the two spheres is
one meter, it requires 1 million volts to jump the gap. Viewed another way, if
there is a difference of 15 kV between the spheres, they must be separated by at
least 15 mm to prevent a discharge.
Note that once ionization occurs, the path between the spheres
requires much less voltage differential to conduct because the gases in the path
have already been ionized. If a current source exists to continue the spark
(discharge), an arc results. This is familiar to horror movie fans as the
Jacob's ladder — the vertical, diverging wires with the arc rising across them.
The voltage is set just high enough so that the spark can initially form at the
bottom (because that is where the wires are closest). Because it is connected to
a high voltage tranformer, it has a continuous supply of current, so a
(continuous) arc forms. The arc rises because it heats the ionized channel of air through which it is passing. Eventually,
the distance between the wires becomes too much to sustain the arc, and it
stops; the process then repeats.[5]
It is important to distinguish the concept of the spark,
which is an electrostatic effect (i.e., it does not conduct DC current), from
that of the arc, which is an electrodynamic effect (and does conduct a DC
current).[6]
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