JoVE Logo

S'identifier

25.11 : Susceptibility, Permittivity and Dielectric Constant

When placed in an external electric field, a dielectric material gets polarized. The charge density in the dielectric material is given by the sum of the bound and free charge densities, while the total charge density can also be written in terms of the total electric field. The bound charge density can be measured in terms of polarization, leading to the relationship between electric displacement and polarization.

Eigenvectors and eigenvalues; A diagram illustrating matrix transformation concepts in linear algebra.

The polarization is proportional to the electric field for the linear dielectrics. This introduces a new proportionality constant called the electric susceptibility, a dimensionless quantity. The electric susceptibility is the tendency of any material to get polarized and is zero for free space.

Static equilibrium concept; ΣFx=0, ΣFy=0 diagram; balance forces vectors analysis.

These expressions can be solved to give the second proportionality constant, or the permittivity of the material.

MicroRNA pathway diagram; gene silencing via Dicer processing, RISC complex formation, mRNA cleavage.

The ratio between the material's permittivity and the free space's permeability gives the third proportionality constant, called the relative permittivity or the dielectric constant.

Osmotic pressure, Van't Hoff equation: π = iMRT, diagram of solution and semipermeable membrane.

This is the same proportionality constant that gives the relationship between the capacitance of a capacitor with and without a dielectric medium. The value of the dielectric constant for free space is 1. The presence of a dielectric medium in a capacitor always increases the energy storage, thereby increasing the capacitance. Hence, the dielectric constant for any medium is always greater than 1.

Tags

SusceptibilityPermittivityDielectric ConstantElectric FieldDielectric MaterialPolarizationCharge DensityElectric DisplacementLinear DielectricsBound Charge DensityFree SpaceRelative PermittivityCapacitanceEnergy Storage

Du chapitre 25:

article

Now Playing

25.11 : Susceptibility, Permittivity and Dielectric Constant

Capacitance

1.3K Vues

article

25.1 : Condensateurs et capacité

Capacitance

7.4K Vues

article

25.2 : Condensateur sphérique et cylindrique

Capacitance

5.5K Vues

article

25.3 : Condensateurs en série et en parallèle

Capacitance

3.9K Vues

article

25.4 : Capacité équivalente

Capacitance

1.3K Vues

article

25.5 : Énergie stockée dans un condensateur

Capacitance

3.6K Vues

article

25.6 : Énergie stockée dans un condensateur : résolution de problèmes

Capacitance

1.0K Vues

article

25.7 : Condensateur avec un diélectrique

Capacitance

3.8K Vues

article

25.8 : Polarisation diélectrique dans un condensateur

Capacitance

4.5K Vues

article

25.9 : Loi de Gauss dans les diélectriques

Capacitance

4.2K Vues

article

25.10 : Potentiel dû à un objet polarisé

Capacitance

353 Vues

article

25.12 : Conditions aux limites électrostatiques dans les diélectriques

Capacitance

1.1K Vues

JoVE Logo

Confidentialité

Conditions d'utilisation

Politiques

Recherche

Enseignement

À PROPOS DE JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Tous droits réservés.