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Electromagnetism
Physics 15b
Lecture #20
Dielectrics
Electric Dipoles
Purcell 10.1–10.6
What We Did Last Time
Plane wave solutions of Maxwell’s equations
⎧⎪E = E0 sin(k ⋅ r − ω t)
ω = kc, E0 = B0 , k̂ = Ê × B̂
⎨
⎩⎪B = B0 sin(k ⋅ r − ω t)
Propagates along k
with speed c
Two possible polarizations
for the same k
Energy flow given by the Poynting vector S =
For plane waves, average energy flow is S =
c
E×B
4π
c 2
c 2
E k̂ =
E k̂
4π
8π 0
1
Goals Today
Introduce dielectric material
Synonym for “insulator”
Effects on electric field expressed by dielectric constant
Universally found in capacitors
Look into the microscopic origin of dielectric
Dipole moment of small charge distribution
Electric field generated by a dipole moment
Force on a dipole moment due to electric field
Next lecture: construct dielectric from dipoles
Material in a Uniform E Field
A slab of insulator is in a uniform E field
E
+ and − charges feel the force F = qE
F
They can’t flow, but they do move slightly from
the natural (equilibrium) positions
Excess + and − charges appear on the surfaces
Additional electric field E′ appears inside
E ′ = 4πσ and opposite to E
It’s reasonable to assume σ ∝ E
Total electric field inside the insulator is
1
Ein = Eout + E′ = (1− k)Eout = Eout
ε
ε = the dielectric constant of the material
+σ
E′
−σ
ε > 1, i.e., the electric field is weaker inside
2
Dielectric Constant
Dielectric constant ε depends
on the density
Gases very close to 1
Liquids and solids 2 to 10
Molecules can rotate to align with
electric field
Prime example: water
+
−
O −
H
−
O
−
H +
Condition
ε
Air
Gas, 0°C
1.0006
Methane
Gas, 0°C
1.0009
HCl
Gas, 0°C
1.0046
Gas, 110°C
1.0126
Water
Liquids and gases of polar
molecules have large ε
+ H
Substance
E
H +
See textbook §10.6 and 10.12
Liquid, 20°C
80.4
Benzene
Liquid, 20°C
2.28
Methanol
Liquid, 20°C
33.6
Ammonia
Liquid, −34°C 22.6
Mineral oil
Liquid, 20°C
2.24
NaCl
Solid, 20°C
6.12
Sulfur
Solid, 20°C
4.0
Silicon
Solid, 20°C
11.7
Polyethylene Solid, 20°C
2.25–2.3
Porcelain
6.0–8.0
Solid, 20°C
Dielectric in Capacitor
Capacitor is filled with a dielectric
−Q
+Q
4π Q
area A
Charge ±Q on the plates create E0 =
A
Dielectric polarizes and creates
surface charges
E
4π Q
Actual electric field inside is E = 0 =
ε
εA
Potential difference is
V=
∫
right
left
E ⋅ds =
4π Qd
εA
C=
Q
εA
=
= ε ⋅C0
V 4π d
Dielectric increases the capacitance
by a factor ε
d
capacitance
w/o dielectric
Real-world capacitors use various dielectric materials
paper, ceramics, mica, oil, liquid electrolyte, etc.
Issues: field (voltage) tolerance, frequency response, temperature
dependence, polarity, long-term stability
3
Half-Filled Capacitor
A rectangular capacitor is partially filled with a dielectric
If it were empty, the capacitance
would be
ab
C0 =
4π d
Consider it as two capacitors:
a(b − x)
4π d
ε ax
=
4π d
Empty part: Cempty =
Filled part: Cfilled
a
ε
x
d
b
Ctotal =
a{b + (ε − 1)x}
4π d
connected
in parallel
Suppose there is charge Q in this capacitor
dU
2π dQ 2 (ε − 1)
Q2
2π dQ 2
=−
<0
=
dx
2C a{b + (ε − 1)x}
a{b + (ε − 1)x} 2
Increasing x decreases the potential energy
Energy is U =
Electrostatic force pulls the dielectric into the capacitor
Small Charge Distribution
So far we had uniform E field causing uniform polarization
More general case (non-uniform E) requires a better framework
Consider an arbitrary charge distribution of a small size,
and the electric field far away from it
A
Electric potential at point A is
ρ(r ′)dv ′
Integral over volume where ρ ≠ 0
ϕ=∫
V
r − r′
Since r′ << r, we use Taylor expansion
r − r′
−1
= (r − 2rr ′ cos θ + r ′ )
2
2 −1 2
E
r
ρ≠0
r′
⎞
1⎛
r′
r ′ 2 (3 cos2 θ − 1)
= ⎜ 1+ cos θ + 2
+ ⎟
r⎝
r
2
r
⎠
4
Moments
We can now express the potential at A as
ϕ=
1
1
ρ(r ′) dv ′ + 2
∫
r V
r
K0
∫
V
ρ(r ′)r ′ cos θ dv ′ +
1
r3
∫
V
ρ(r ′)r ′ 2
(3 cos2 θ − 1)
dv ′ +
2
K1
K2
/r2
At large distance, K0/r >> K1 >> K2 >> …
We must consider higher-order terms only if the preceding terms
happen to be zero
/r3
K0 is the net charge of the source
K0/r is the familiar Coulomb potential
For a small charged object, the Coulomb force due to the net charge
outweighs everything else
If the object (e.g. a molecule) is net neutral, the K1 term
becomes important
Dipole Moment
We can rewrite the K1 term as
K1
r
2
=
1
r2
∫
V
r̂
⋅ ρ(r ′)r ′ dv ′
r 2 ∫V
ρ(r ′)r ′ cos θ dv ′ =
a vector determined by
the charge distribution
Define the dipole moment of a charge distribution by
p≡
∫
V
ρ(r ′)r ′ dv ′
then the electric potential due to it is
ϕ=
r̂ ⋅ p
r2
Q: Doesn’t this definition depend on where the origin of the
coordinate system is?
A: It does. But that’s OK
5
Coordinate Origin
Let’s move the origin by Δr
It’s still inside the charge distribution
r → r − Δr
r ′ → r ′ − Δr
The dipole moment becomes
p → ∫ ρ(r ′)(r ′ − Δr)dv ′ = p − QΔr
Δr
V
A
E
r
r′
If Q = 0, no change to p
If Q ≠ 0, we now have a different p
Re-calculate the first two terms of the potential
ϕ=
Q r̂ ⋅ p
Q
(r − Δr) ⋅ (p − QΔr)
+ 2 →
+
3
r
r
r − Δr
r − Δr
Taylor expand by Δr/r and take the leading terms
⎛ 1 r̂ ⋅ Δr
⎞ r̂ ⋅ (p − QΔr)
Q ⎜ + 2 + ⎟ +
+
⎝r
⎠
r
r2
Extra terms cancel between the
Coulomb and the dipole parts
Simple Electric Dipole
Two charges, +q and –q, separated by a distance s
p≡
∫
V
This is a useful model for any neutral object
(e.g. a molecule) with a dipole moment p
s
ρ(r ′)r ′ dv ′ = +qs − q0 = qs
−q
+q
Electric field at large distances will be identical
We know how to draw field lines around this
6
Dipole Electric Field
⎛ r̂ ⋅ p ⎞
The electric field due to a dipole p is E = −∇ϕ = −∇ ⎜ 2 ⎟
⎝ r ⎠
Use spherical coordinates, the polar axis parallel to p
ϕ=
p cos θ
r2
⎧
∂ϕ 2p cos θ
=
⎪⎪Er = −
∂r
r3
⎨
⎪E = − 1 ∂ϕ = p sin θ
⎪⎩ θ
r ∂θ
r3
p
E field decreases with 1/r3
Faster than Coulomb, as
expected
Force on Dipole
An electric dipole p is in an external field E
Force qE acts on each charge q
Net force is zero if total charge Q is zero
+q +qE
Forces on +q and –q may be equal and
opposite, but not on the same line
s
E
−qE
−q
Combined, they produce a torque
N = ∑ r × F = r+ × qE + r− × (−qE) = q(r+ − r− ) × E = qs × E = p × E
The torque N rotates the dipole so that it will line up with E
Also: the net force F might not be zero if E is not uniform
F = qE(r+ ) − qE(r− ) = q(s ⋅ ∇)E = (p ⋅ ∇)E
This one is tricky, so let’s look at a simple example
7
Dipole and a Charge
A dipole p is near a charge Q
Assume s << r
p is lined up with E
Q
−qE
−q
s
+q +qE
r
Net force is
⎛ Q
Q⎞
2qQ
F = qE(r + s) − qE(r) = q ⎜
−
≈− 3
2
2⎟
⎝ (r + s)
r ⎠
r
i.e., the dipole is attracted to the charge
What if Q is negative?
Torque will rotate p so that it points toward the charge
Net force F will point toward the charge again
Electric dipole is generally pulled toward stronger E field
This is why neutral objects (e.g. dust particles) are attracted by static
electricity
Summary
1
ε
Electric field inside dielectric is reduced Ein = Eout
ε = dielectric constant
Capacitance is increased by factor ε
Far field due to small charge distribution is determined by:
First, the net charge Q Coulomb field
If Q = 0, then the dipole moment p ≡ ρ(r ′)r ′ dv ′
V
s
Modeled by
∫
p = qs
−q
ϕ=
r̂ ⋅ p
r2
+q
A dipole in an electric field receives:
Torque N = p × E
If E is non-uniform, net force F = (p ⋅ ∇)E
Dipoles are attracted to stronger E field
8