This paper systematically investigates the failure characteristics and mechanisms of insulating materials in DC voltage dividers under combined high-frequency voltage and high-temperature conditions via simulations and experiments. The results showed that high-frequency harmonics severely degrade the insulation strength of polypropylene/paper/polypropylene (PPLP) at 10 kHz, in which the bulk breakdown strength of PPLP decreases by over 50%. Furthermore, the surface flashover voltage in oil is reduced by 17.7% under high-frequency voltage alone, and by as much as 51% when white flocculent substances are present in the oil. The dielectric properties of PPLP strongly depend on frequency and temperature, which aggravate the heat accumulation of the divider under high-frequency voltage. Furthermore, the multilayer structure of PPLP introduces deeper trap levels due to interfacial states, which reduce the breakdown strength and flashover voltage of PPLP. Electro-thermal coupling induces a rapid temperature rising to 98 °C at 25 kHz caused by dielectric loss, leading to oil turbidity and white precipitation, consistent with finite element simulations. Consequently, a failure mechanism is proposed as follows: prolonged electro-thermal stress causes chain scission in styrene-containing materials, releasing monomers that repolymerize into white polystyrene deposits. Their porous structure and dielectric mismatch distort the interfacial field, trigger partial discharge, and aggravate surface flashover.
Li et al. (Thu,) studied this question.