Chemistry:Copper-clad aluminium wire

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Short description: Type of electrical conductor
Copper-clad aluminium wires of different gauges

Copper-clad aluminium wire (CCAW or CCA) is a dual-metal electrical conductor composed of an inner aluminium core and outer copper cladding.

Production

A copper strip is formed into the shape of a cylinder, while it is being wrapped around an aluminum core and the edges of the copper strip are welded together. The assembly is then pulled through a die, where the cladded wire is squeezed and stretched while also improving the bonding between the copper and the aluminum core.[1]

Uses

The primary applications of this conductor revolve around weight reduction requirements. These applications include high-quality coils, such as the voice coils in headphones or portable loudspeakers; high frequency coaxial applications, such as RF antennas and cable television distribution cables; and power cables.[citation needed]

CCA was also used in electrical wiring for buildings.[2] The copper/aluminium construction was adopted to avoid some of the problems with aluminium wire yet retain most of the cost advantage.

CCA is also seen in counterfeit unshielded twisted pair networking cables. These cables are often less expensive than their full-copper counterparts, but the official specifications such as Category 6 require conductors to be pure copper.[3] This has exposed the manufacturers or installers of cable with fake certification to legal liabilities.[4]

Properties

The properties of copper-clad aluminium wire include:

Disadvantages

  • Easily sold as counterfeit copper wire to unaware clients
  • Much more prone to mechanical fatigue failure than pure copper wire
  • Gets much hotter than pure copper in case of severe overcurrent, such as short circuits

Skin effect

The skin effect forces alternating current to flow on the outer periphery of any wire; in this case, the outer copper cladding of the conductor which has lower resistance than the mostly unused aluminum interior. The better conductor on the outer path causes the wire's resistance at high frequencies, where the skin effect is greater, to approach that of a pure copper wire. This improved conductivity over bare aluminum makes the copper-clad aluminium wire a good fit for radio frequency use.

The skin effect is similarly exploited in copper-clad steel wire, such as the center conductors of many coaxial cables, which are commonly used for high frequency feedlines with high strength and conductivity requirements.

See also

References