This document summarizes chapter 5 of a textbook on electromagnetic fields and waves. The chapter discusses electric fields in materials, including how materials are classified based on electrical conductivity as conductors or dielectrics. It also covers the properties of conductors and dielectrics, such as how an applied electric field causes charge migration in conductors and polarization in dielectrics. The chapter concludes by discussing boundary conditions at interfaces between different materials.
This document summarizes chapter 5 of a textbook on electromagnetic fields and waves. The chapter discusses electric fields in materials, including how materials are classified based on electrical conductivity as conductors or dielectrics. It also covers the properties of conductors and dielectrics, such as how an applied electric field causes charge migration in conductors and polarization in dielectrics. The chapter concludes by discussing boundary conditions at interfaces between different materials.
This document summarizes chapter 5 of a textbook on electromagnetic fields and waves. The chapter discusses electric fields in materials, including how materials are classified based on electrical conductivity as conductors or dielectrics. It also covers the properties of conductors and dielectrics, such as how an applied electric field causes charge migration in conductors and polarization in dielectrics. The chapter concludes by discussing boundary conditions at interfaces between different materials.
This document summarizes chapter 5 of a textbook on electromagnetic fields and waves. The chapter discusses electric fields in materials, including how materials are classified based on electrical conductivity as conductors or dielectrics. It also covers the properties of conductors and dielectrics, such as how an applied electric field causes charge migration in conductors and polarization in dielectrics. The chapter concludes by discussing boundary conditions at interfaces between different materials.
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Electromagnetic
fields & waves
EEEB 253 Chapter 5 Semester I 2013/14 27 th May 6 th Sept. 2013 College of Engineering 2 Chapter 5: Electric fields in materials Ker Pin Jern Universiti Tenaga Nasional, College of Engineering, Dept. of Electrical Power 1. Properties of materials 2. Conductors 3. Dielectrics 4. Continuity equation 5. Boundary conditions
Previous chapter consider electric field in free space Electric field in other mediums / materials most of the equations are similar as in last chapter with little modification Materials classified based on electrical properties conductor and non-conductor (insulator or dielectric)
3 5.1: Properties of material Materials are categorized based on conductivity in the unit of mhos/m or Siemens/m (S/m) Conductivity is usually dependent on the temperature and frequency High conductivity conductor / metal; low conductivity insulator; in between semiconductor Conductivity increases with decreasing temperature Superconductor extremely high / infinite conductivity at very low temperature (0-4 Kelvin) what degree celcius??
Ker Pin Jern Universiti Tenaga Nasional, College of Engineering, Dept. of Electrical Power 4 5.2: Conductors Conductors many freely moving charges An isolated conductor (top figure); external Efield is applied+ve charges are pushed along Efield and -ve charges move in opposite direction (charge migration happens very quickly) 2 things are done by the free charges:- They accumulate on the surface of the conductor (induced surface charges) Induced charges set up an internal induced field A conductor is an equipotential body potential is the same everywhere
Ker Pin Jern Universiti Tenaga Nasional, College of Engineering, Dept. of Electrical Power 5 5.2: Conductors According to GL, if E=0, then charge density=0 Under static condition, What happens when the ends / terminals of a conductor are maintained at a certain potential difference? E=0??the conductor is no longer isolated but wired to a source of electromotive force (battery) Disrupt the electrostatic equilibrium by forcing free charges to move There is an Efield to have current flows ; Efield, +ve charge, current have the same direction; electrons flow in opposite direction Electrons movement is opposed by a damping force Resistance
Ker Pin Jern Universiti Tenaga Nasional, College of Engineering, Dept. of Electrical Power 6 5.2: Conductors To obtain the resistance, assume the conductor has a cross section area, S; current density, Ohms law, ; Resistivity of material, For conductor with non-uniform cross section, Using power and energy equation, P.E. 5.3
Ker Pin Jern Universiti Tenaga Nasional, College of Engineering, Dept. of Electrical Power 7 5.3: Dielectrics Charges in dielectric are bounded but can displace if a sufficiently large external force is applied When an Efield is applied, +ve charge is displaced in the direction of Efield and ve charge is displaced in the opposite direction of Efield Dipole separation of +ve and ve charges; Dipole is created the dielectric is said to be polarized In a polarized state, the electrons are distorted; Distorted charge distribution = original distribution + dipole moment ( ), d is the distance vector from Q to +Q Total dipole moment
Ker Pin Jern Universiti Tenaga Nasional, College of Engineering, Dept. of Electrical Power 8 5.3: Dielectrics Calculate the field due to a polarized dielectric Net effect of the dielectric on the electric field is to increase D by an amount P. Polarization P will vary with E, usually as is the electric susceptibility of material a measure of how susceptible a dielectric is to electric fields Dielectric constant Permittivity of dielectric vs. permittivity of free space Dielectric constant / relative permittivity - ratio of to ; may change at high frequencies > 1 GHz Ker Pin Jern Universiti Tenaga Nasional, College of Engineering, Dept. of Electrical Power 9 5.3: Dielectrics Try eg. 5.7; In class: P.E. 5.7 Ker Pin Jern Universiti Tenaga Nasional, College of Engineering, Dept. of Electrical Power 10 5.5: Boundary conditions We considered Efield only in one medium When it involves more than one medium, the conditions that the field must satisfy at the interface separating the medium is called the Boundary Conditions Consider 3 cases 1) dielectric 1 and dielectric 2; 2) Conductor and dielectric; 3) Conductor and free space Use Maxwells equations:- Decompose electric field intensity into 2 orthogonal components tangential and normal components of E
Ker Pin Jern Universiti Tenaga Nasional, College of Engineering, Dept. of Electrical Power 11 Chapter 5 Conclusion Properties of material Conductor vs. dielectric Conductor Efield, current flow, Ohms law, energy and power Dielectric field, polarization, relative permittivity Current continuity equation based on Ohms law and Gausss law 3 boundary conditions tangential and normal components of Efield Tutorial questions:- 5.13, 5.25, 5.26, 5.30
Ker Pin Jern Universiti Tenaga Nasional, College of Engineering, Dept. of Electrical Power