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Letter 25006
Black Oxidation of Power Distribution
Cables
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I'm a power system Electrician and would like to know what makes
the copper concentric neutral of power cables turn black in certain
areas. In one of our stations where the cables come into the building
through the ducts the concentric neutral has all turned black. As
cables reach the center of the building it becomes less common but
there is still some black coloration. I figure its due to oxidation.
The blackest parts of the copper being in areas where water tends to
seep into the basement during melts and storms. But why a black
coloration? It looks like the cables are overheating turning the
copper black but not.
Any insight?
Brian Marsh
Electrical Distribution - Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
I have seen the same black corrosion of copper wires without knowing
exactly what it is.
Sulfides are black, so it could be sulfides. I've seen it on boat
wiring, so it could be related to moisture or chlorides. Very finely
divided metal particles look black, so it could possibly be some
dissolution and redeposition of a few atoms of copper. But
unfortunately I can't come up with a unified theory that ties these
disparate observations into an answer. Sorry.
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Ted Mooney, P.E.
finishing.com Inc. - Brick,
NJ
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