Theory of electric field breakdown nucleation due to mobile dislocations
Eliyahu Zvi Engelberg, Ayelet Badichi Yashar, Yinon Ashkenazy, Michael, Assaf, Inna Popov

TL;DR
This paper presents a stochastic model linking mobile dislocation fluctuations to electrical breakdown in high-voltage systems, validated with experimental data and analytical solutions, offering insights for predicting and improving cathode performance.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel stochastic model of electrical breakdown based on mobile dislocation dynamics, with analytical expressions and experimental validation, advancing understanding of breakdown mechanisms in high-voltage systems.
Findings
Analytical expressions for breakdown time and dislocation distribution.
Model validated against experimental breakdown data.
Predictions useful for cathode conditioning and reliability.
Abstract
A model is described, in which electrical breakdown in high-voltage systems is caused by stochastic fluctuations of the mobile dislocation population in the cathode. In this model, the mobile dislocation density normally fluctuates, with a finite probability to undergo a critical transition due to the effects of the external field. It is suggested that once such a transition occurs, the mobile dislocation density will increase deterministically, leading to electrical breakdown. Model parametrization is achieved via microscopic analysis of OFHC Cu cathode samples from the CERN CLIC project, allowing the creation and depletion rates of mobile dislocations to be estimated as a function of the initial physical condition of the material and the applied electric field. We find analytical expressions for the mean breakdown time and quasistationary probability distribution of the mobile…
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