ABSTRACT

Covering the choice, attachment, and testing of contact materials, Electrical Contacts introduces a thorough discussion on making electric contact and contact interface conduction, presents a general outline of, and measurement techniques for, important corrosion mechanisms, discusses the results of contact wear when plug-in connections are made an

chapter |13 pages

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

chapter 2|20 pages

4 TYPES OF CORROSION

chapter 3|37 pages

Contact Corrosion

chapter |3 pages

• : •

chapter |2 pages

ACKNOWLEDGMENT REFERENCES

chapter 4|124 pages

Power Connections Milenko Braunovie

chapter 5|16 pages

2 CONNECTORS

chapter 5|12 pages

4 CONNECTOR CONTACT DEGRADATION

chapter 0|6 pages

1mm

chapter |16 pages

lubricant

chapter 7|30 pages

Materials, Coatings, and Platings

chapter 8|4 pages

The Arc and Interruption

chapter |28 pages

35x1

chapter 8|2 pages

6 THE ARC IN VACUUM

chapter |1 pages

Cathode Anode

chapter |15 pages

columnar, vacuum arc

chapter 9|10 pages

The Consequences of Arcing

chapter |23 pages

VELOCITY EFFECT

chapter L|2 pages

IEFERIE ICES

chapter 11|39 pages

Low Current Switching

chapter |42 pages

(72 1 =

chapter I|21 pages

is the peak current and K1

chapter |6 pages

da U do,

chapter 13|41 pages

Arcing Contact Materials

chapter |19 pages

Erosion Vs. Current

chapter 13|3 pages

9 SILVER-GRAPHITE CONTACT MATERIALS

chapter |7 pages

REFERENCES

chapter |12 pages

iiii/ iii

chapter 14|5 pages

5 CLAD METALS, INLAY, AND EDGE LAY

chapter |6 pages

Migration Time VS Area Diameter

chapter |4 pages

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

chapter 444|3 pages

-. , .e.

chapter |8 pages

Vso ft = 120 mV d= 10 = 0.35

chapter 13|17 pages

Z VZ

chapter |7 pages

SYMBOLS

chapter |20 pages

REFERENCES

chapter |14 pages

Author I ndex