Lecture 1 - Electric materials Flashcards
What are electric dipoles and which 2 types exist?
In general, positive and negative charges in a material can be thought of as being arranged into pairs called dipoles. They are generally arranged at random and their electric field cancels out.
1) Permanent dipoles
2) Dipoles that form under the influence of external fields
What are dielectric materials?
Materials whose dipoles can be polarised, i.e., an applied electric field causes the dipoles to align under its influence.
What are polar dielectrics?
Materials whose dipoles are permanently present but disordered.
What are paraelectric materials?
Dielectric materials that exhibit a large response to an external electric field.
Ferroelectric materials are usually paraelectric above their transition temperature.
What is the net field occuring from the application of an electric field on a dielectric?
E = E_applied -E_induced
The induced field opposes the applied field
What are ferroelectric materials?
In ferroelectric materials, the charges are spontaneously aligned, typically exhibiting an electric field even in the absence of an external field.
What is the effect of a dielectric in a capacitor?
A dielectric inside a capacitor increases capacitance. It has the effect of reducing the amount of voltage required to store a certain amount of charge.
This is because energy in the capacitor is now stored in both in the electric field in free space and in the ordering of the dipoles in the material between the plates.
What are the two contributions to the total electric field?
1) Charges introduced into a capacitor through its leads
2) Charges associated with the material between the plates (Polarisation/Polarisation Density)
What is Polarisation / Polarisation Density?
What is the polarisation equation?
Charges associated with the material between the plates.
Has units of Coulomb per square metre.
π = Ξ΅_0Οπ
Only applies for linear, homogenous, isotropic materials.
Where Ο the electric susceptibility and 1+Ο = Ξ΅_r
What is the Displacement Field (D)?
What relationships does it satisfy?
The displacement field represents the βfreeβ charges flowing through a capacitor. (as opposed to the charges bound by the dielectric)
β.π = Ο_f π = Ξ΅_0*π + π
What is the electric susceptibility of a material?
The electric susceptibility Ο is a materialβs property which describes the materialβs electric response.
1+Ο = Ξ΅_r