Dielectric
Encyclopedia : D : DI : DIE : Dielectric
- For Dielectric Shader (Mental Ray), see Dielectric Shader.
Dielectrics have the property of making space seem bigger or smaller than it is dimensionally to electric charges and electromagnetic waves. For example, when a dielectric material is placed between two electric charges it increases the force between them, as if they have moved closer together. When an electromagnetic wave travels through a dielectric, the velocity of the wave will be reduced and it will behave as if it had a shorter wavelength.
Electrically, the dielectric constant is a measure of the extent to which a substance concentrates the electrostatic lines of flux. More specifically it is the ratio of the amount of electrical energy stored in an insulator, when a static electric field is imposed across it, relative to vacuum (which has a dielectric constant of 1). Thus, the dielectric constant is also known as the static permittivity.
Explanation
When an electric field is applied to a dielectric medium, a current flows. The total current flowing in a real dielectric is in general made of two parts: a conduction and a displacement current. The displacement current can be thought of as the elastic response of the dielectric material to the applied electric field. As the magnitude of the electric field is increased, the displacement is stored in the dielectric material, and when the electric field is decreased the material releases displacement current. The electric displacement can be separated into a vacuum contribution and one arising from the dielectric by
- [\mathbf = \varepsilon_ \mathbf + \mathbf = \varepsilon_ \mathbf + \varepsilon_\chi\mathbf = \varepsilon_ \mathbf \left( 1 + \chi \right),]
Complex permittivity in dielectrics
Apart from a vacuum, the response of normal dielectrics to external fields generally depends on the frequency of the field. This frequency dependence is because a material's polarization does not respond instantaneously to an applied field. The response must always be causal (arising after the applied field). For this reason permittivity is often treated as a complex function of the frequency of the applied field [\omega], [\varepsilon \rightarrow \widehat(\omega)]. The definition of permittivity therefore becomes
- [D_e^ = \widehat(\omega) E_ e^,]
- [\varepsilon_ = \lim_ \widehat(\omega).]
- [\widehat = \frace^ = |\varepsilon|e^.]
- [\widehat(\omega) = \varepsilon'(\omega) - i\varepsilon''(\omega) = \frac \left( \cos\delta - i\sin\delta \right). ]
Dielectrics in Parallel-Plate Capacitors
Putting a dielectric material between the plates in a parallel plate capacitor causes an increase in the capacitance in proportion to k, the dielectric constant of the material:
- :[C = \frac ]
- where [\epsilon_0] is the permittivity of free space, A is the area covered by the capacitors, and d is the distance between the plates.
Applications
The use of a dielectric in a capacitor presents several advantages. The simplest of these is that the conducting plates can be placed very close to one another without risk of contact. Also, if subjected to a very high electric field, any substance will ionize and become a conductor. Dielectrics are more resistant to ionization than air, so a capacitor containing a dielectric can be subjected to a higher operating voltage. Layers of dielectric are commonly incorporated in manufactured capacitors to provide higher capacitance in a smaller space than capacitors using only air or a vacuum between their plates, and the term dielectric refers to this application as well as the insulation used in power and RF cables.
Some practical dielectrics
Dielectric materials can be solids, liquids, or gases. In addition, a high vacuum can also be a useful, lossless, dielectric even though its relative dielectric constant is only unity.Solid dielectrics are perhaps the most commonly used in electrical engineering and many solids are very good insulators. Some examples include porcelain, glass, and most plastics. Air, nitrogen and sulfur hexafluoride are the three most commonly used gaseous dielectrics.
- Industrial coatings such as parylene provide a dielectric barrier between the substrate and its environment.
- Mineral oil is used extensively inside electrical transformers as a fluid dielectric and to assist in cooling. Dielectric fluids with higher dielectric constants, such as electrical grade castor oil, are often used in high voltage capacitors to help prevent corona discharge and increase capacitance.
See also
- capacitor
- dielectric strength
- dielectric constant
- electric susceptibility
- electrorotation
- field cage
- low-k
- permittivity
- high-k
- leakage
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