Title: Lecture 4 Electric Potential Conductors Dielectrics
1Lecture 4Electric PotentialConductors
Dielectrics
- Electromagnetics
- Prof. Viviana Vladutescu
2Electric Potential
3Electric Potential
The electric field intensity is acting as a force
on any charges it arrives upon. Therefore in
moving a unit charge from P1 to P2, work must be
done against the field.
4When force is applied to move an object, work is
the product of the force and the distance the
object travels in the direction of the force
5Therefore
without specifying the path
The scalar line integral of an Irrotational
(conservative) E field is path-independent
6Equipotential surfaces
A set of points with same potential forms
equipotential surface. For a point charge,
equipotentials are spheres at fixed radius r.
Consider the plot of the electrostatic potential
contours forming equipotential surfaces around
the point charge superimposed over the field
lines for the point charge
7As we can notice the field goes into the
direction of decreasing potential If the
behavior of the potential is unknown, the
electric intensity field can be determined by
finding the maximum rate and direction of the
spatial change of the potential field
8By using the above in the following equation
we get
Potential difference
9Absolute potential at some finite radius from a
point charge fixed at the origin (reference
voltage of zero at an infinite radius) Work per
Coulomb required to pull a charge from infinity
to the radius R
10For a collection of charges of continuous
distribution
11Review
If the electrical force moves a charge a certain
distance, it does work on that charge. The change
in electric potential over this distance is
defined through the work done by this force
Work doneCharge on QPotential
where potential is shorthand for change in
electric potential, or potential difference. This
is analogous to the definition of the
gravitational potential energy through the work
done by the force of gravity in moving a mass
through a certain distance. The units of
potential difference, or simply potential, are
Joules / Coulomb, which are called Volts (V).
Physically, potential difference has to do with
how much work the electric field does in moving a
charge from one place to another.
12- Batteries, for example, are rated by the
potential difference across their terminals. In a
nine volt battery the potential difference
between the positive and negative terminals is
precisely nine volts. On the other hand the
potential difference across the power outlet in
the wall of your home is 110 volts.
13Conductors
14Are caractherized by e, µ and s The conductivity
s (S/m or 1/Om or mhos/m) -depends on
the charge density ? -depends on the
temperature Ex of superconductors
yttrium-barium-copper-oxide
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16Current and Current Density
17Types of current -conduction currents present
in conductors and semiconductors and caused by
drift motion of conduction e- or holes in a media
in response to an applied field ex
Js E (conduction current
density) -displacement or electrolytic currents
is the result of migration of positive and
negative ions as well known as time-varying field
phenomenon that allows current to flow between
plates of a capacitor. -convection currents
involve the movement of charged particles through
vacuum, air or other nonconductive media (e- in a
cathode ray tube)
18VIR
J E
Conservation of charge
19Conduction currents
For most conducting materials the average drift
velocity is directly proportional to el field
intensity
20Conductors in static electric field
Under static conditions the E field on a
conductor surface is everywhere normal to the
surface (the surface of a conductor is an
equipotential surface under static conditions)
21-The tangential component of the E field on a
conductor surface is zero -The normal
component of the E field at a conductor /free
space boundary is equal to the surface charge
density on the conductor divided by the
permittivity of free space
Charactheristics of E on conductor /free space
interfaces
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24Dielectrics
25-Ideal dielectrics do not contain free
charges -contain bound charges Induced
electric dipoles
The material is polarized
26- Polar molecules (Permanent dipole moment)
Nonpolar molecules
Ex By aligning the molecules during the
fabrication of a material (use E field when the
material is melted and maintain it until it
solidifies) we can obtain electrets
27The volume density of the electric dipole moment
Vector sum of the induced dipole moments
Polarization vector
n-of molecules per unit volume
28Homogeneous linear isotropic media
D eE
De0EP
29Polarization charge densities
-surface
-volume
A polarized dielectric may be replaced by an
equivalent polarization surface charge density
and an equivalent polarization volume charge
density for field calculation
30Total Charge