Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAlaina Brooks Modified over 6 years ago
1
Edward C. Jordan Memorial Offering of the First Course under the Indo-US Inter-University Collaborative Initiative in Higher Education and Research: Electromagnetics for Electrical and Computer Engineering by Nannapaneni Narayana Rao Edward C. Jordan Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Urbana, Illinois, USA Amrita Viswa Vidya Peetham, Coimbatore July 10 – August 11, 2006
2
4.2 Dielectrics
3
Dielectrics are based upon the property of polarization, which is the
phenomenon of the creation of electric dipoles within the material. Electronic polarization: (bound electrons are displaced to form a dipole) Dipole moment p = Qd
4
Orientational polarization: (Already existing dipoles are acted
upon by a torque) Direction into the paper. Ionic polarization: (separation of positive and negative ions in molecules)
5
The phenomenon of polarization results in a polarization
charge in the material which produces a secondary E.
6
Polarization Current
7
To take into account the effect of polarization, we define the
displacement flux density vector, D, as vary with the material, implicitly taking into account the effect of polarization.
8
As an example, consider Then, inside the material,
9
D4.3 For 0 < z < d, (a)
10
(b) (c)
11
Isotropic Dielectrics:
D is parallel to E for all E. Anisotropic Dielectrics: D is not parallel to E in general. Only for certain directions (or polarizations) of E is D parallel to E. These are known as characteristic polarizations.
13
D4.4 (a)
14
(b)
15
(c)
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.