Hi again
From your description so far it looks like you have something like this?
Separate units placed in an installation where there may be up to 50 installed. The load for the installation is your figure of 10KW/Phase 30KW total with each unit rated at 600W total or 200W per phase. If that were so then, in isolation, 100nF X2 capacitors in each unit would not seem unreasonable.
You mentioned 'dimming' and if the above figures are correct then I would assume you are you are dealing with some sort of theatre lighting system...? As such you might/will not have much control over which loads are active so, as you suggest, balancing the loads on each phase will not necessarily be feasible.
I'd also guess that you are unable to test a 'complete' system in the 'lab' but are restricted to a single or limited number of units. Since the field failures take six months then you can't really sit around in the lab waiting for something to happen...
So, assuming the above is correct.
In isolation things might be OK. With a single unit is it possible to measure the current in the X2 capacitors? I should hunt out a data sheet but in as much as they have dV/dT ratings they may also have dI/dT ratings. If you have a current probe then good otherwise put a low value, low inductance resistor, 100mR ?, in series with one and measure across it to see if there might be problems in that respect.
As you say since you are unable to balance phase currents then as suggested you might be driving neutral via one phase such that the other phases suffer overvoltage. They only real way of testing that would be on a complete system so I guess you would have to go and play with one unless you can install some sort of monitor.
Load up a single phase to its maximum and measure the relative voltages to see if there is an overvoltage condition on the other phases.
One final thing to look at is whether the units that fail are always in the same or similar locations within within the installation. I would guess that this is some form of standard install and wiring loom within the cabinet containing the units....
As I have drawn my picture then they are connected as a 'bus' to the main input so in operation you might expect 'UNITN' to experience a reduced input voltage and be 'happy' whereas 'UNIT1' directly at the input would experience the full supply. That may or may not be a problem although if there is some concept of transients during 'load dump' or otherwise it will be subjected to worse case conditions.
I'm not sure it would exist but there may also be a scenario as a result of the way things are wired that whilst the 100n capacitors are fine for a single unit there may be some way whereby when things get connected those capacitors are effectively shared and one or a number of units may be loaded 'preferentially' stressing its/their devices more than you might have expected giving rise to early failures.
Regarding your zero cross-detector. It does seem strange that you would see failures here given the current is effectively limited by the 10K resistor unless, once again you are seeing some form of overvoltage. The upper capacitor does effectively see the full line voltage.
I would not be certain but in this particular part of the circuit you do not need to use X or Y rated capacitors. They are designated as such because they are expected to be connected directly across the supply, X, LN LL or, Y, LE. In the network you have that is no longer the case.
Here is a quick model of that part,
I don't now what sort of op-amp circuit you have connected to the output on the end of the 68K resistor but some figures are,
C1 273V peak 194V RMS
C2 82V peak 56V RMS
R2 85V peak 59V RMS 0.366W dissipation
R1 82V peak 56V RMS 0.334W dissipation
As given the circuit does seem to introduce what might be unwanted phase shifts to the signal being measured. I would not know if that is an issue in your circuit. Otherwise given it is presenting its output to an op-amp then I might expect that you would be able to scale the components for lower power dissipation and replace the capacitors with, perhaps, normal 4n7 1kV rated ceramic devices.
Genome.
---------- Post added at 12:58 ---------- Previous post was at 11:24 ----------
One thing that occurs having seen and been reminded by Prince213's post is that due to the location of the X2 capacitors on the line side of the common mode choke they are, to some degree, protected from load current transients by the differential inductance of the common mode choke. That 'parasitic' is used to control differential mode noise as well.
In your case, if I am right that you are using these units to control incandescent lamps, then you may have to take into account the 'cold' resistance of those lamps. That would presume the units are required to do some 'high speed' flashy light show sort of thing. Picking figures out of my hat then say your 200W lamp draws about 0.8Amps when fully on. If its cold resistance is, guess, 50 times less and you just switch it directly at the right/wrong point in the line voltage then that would be 40Amps which may well hurt the capacitor.
It may be possible to adjust something within your control circuits to avoid or perhaps reduce such effects.
Genome.