Pulsed power

Pulsed power is the science and technology of accumulating energy over a relatively long period of time and releasing it very quickly, thus increasing the instantaneous power. They can be used in some applications such as food processing, water treatment, and medical applications.

Overview

Energy is typically stored within electrostatic fields (capacitors), magnetic fields (inductors), as mechanical energy (using large flywheels connected to special-purpose high-current alternators), or as chemical energy (high-current lead-acid batteries, or explosives). By releasing the stored energy over a very short interval (a process that is called energy compression), a huge amount of peak power can be delivered to a load. For example, if one joule of energy is stored within a capacitor and then evenly released to a load over one second, the average power delivered to the load would only be 1 watt. However, if all of the stored energy were released within one microsecond, the average power over one second would still be one watt, but the instantaneous peak power would be one megawatt, a million times greater.


Maximum Power Records

Single pulse energies as high as 100 MJ, power as high as a "few hundred terawatts" with voltages between 10 kV and 50 MV, and currents between 1 kA and 10 MA, have been achieved at least as of 2006.[1]

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gollark: You *can* use inflation as a slightly horrific way to tax assets, at least.
gollark: So you just get shortages of things.
gollark: The demand for everything would increase slightly, but the supply wouldn't be able to increase arbitrarily in all cases.
gollark: You can't do that. That would be stupid.

See also

Manufacturers

  • ABB Pulsed Power Manufacturer of semiconductor-based replacements for thyratrons

References

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