scholarly journals Dielectric constants of solids at high frequencies and the influence of water of crystallization on dielectric constant

The determination of the dielectric constant of one constituent of a mixture, when the dielectric constants of the other component and the mixture itself are known, has been a problem which has been given much attention for many years. The familiar Clausius-Mossotti relationship for the dielectric constant of any substance is: ε-1/(ε + 2) d = A, where ε is the dielectric constant of the substance, d the density, and A a constant depending upon the polarizability of the molecule. This relation was developed independently by Clausius, Mossotti, Lorenz, Lorentz, Rayleigh, and Debye; but even in the case of pure liquids deviations well outside the experimental error have been found.

2007 ◽  
Vol 124-126 ◽  
pp. 177-180
Author(s):  
Jang Sik Lee ◽  
Q.X. Jia

To investigate the anisotropic dielectric properties of layer-structured bismuth-based ferroelectrics along different crystal directions, we fabricate devices along different crystal orientations using highly c-axis oriented Bi3.25La0.75Ti3O12 (BLT) thin films on (001) LaAlO3 (LAO) substrates. Experimental results have shown that the dielectric properties of the BLT films are highly anisotropic along different crystal directions. The dielectric constants (1MHz at 300 K) are 358 and 160 along [100] and [110], respectively. Dielectric nonlinearity is also detected along these crystal directions. On the other hand, a much smaller dielectric constant and no detectable dielectric nonlinearity in a field range of 0-200 kV/cm are observed for films along [001] when c-axis oriented SRO is used as the bottom electrode.


It has long been recognised that the dielectric constant of a substance gives an important indication of its constitution, and the classical papers of Nernst and Drude giving methods for the determination of dielectric constants, have been followed by a long series of papers giving the dielectric constants of several hundreds of pure liquids and solutions. Since the publication of Debye’s dipole theory in 1912, the literature of the subject has become even more voluminous than before. In surveying the mass of data one is struck by the very large discrepancies which exist in the values obtained by different observers for any one substance, and it is very difficult to decide whether they are due to the difficulty of pre­paring and purifying the substance, differences in experimental conditions such as frequency of the applied E. M. F., or errors in the methods of measure­ment. In order to make it possible to compare the results of different observers, and to provide a fundamental basis for new measurements, it is important that the value of at least one standard liquid should be known with unquestion­able accuracy. The object of the present investigation was to provide such a value. Benzene was chosen as the standard liquid since it has been very widely used in the past, and it is used as a standard in the measurement of other physical properties.


1993 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 109-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. R. Burn ◽  
M. G. Maxwell

The δ18O–δD relationship for ice and water is frequently summarized with a line fitted by least-squares linear regression. This technique assumes that one variable is known exactly and all error can be ascribed to the other. Unfortunately, determinations by mass spectrometry of both δ18O and δD are subject to experimental error. Often a blanket laboratory precision is provided for δ18O and δD, in which case functional analysis, accounting for the relative error in the variables, is appropriate. Properly, however, each sample has an individual analytical error in both variables, defined by the variance in estimates of isotope concentration provided by the mass spectrometer. Where individual errors are known, the least-squares cubic method, which assigns a weight to each sample and generates the summary line by an iterative method, may be used. An algorithm sufficient to determine both the functional fit and the least-squares cubic regression line is presented. Illustrations are provided, one of which demonstrates that if the plot of δ18O versus δD is scattered (r2 < 0.9), both the functional fit and the least-squares cubic regression line may be significantly different from the least-squares linear regression lines.


According to Faraday's ideas, the specific inductive capacity of a substance is due to the polarisation of the molecules as wholes. This is the basis of the old Clausius-Mosotti theory of dielectrics, on which it is shown first that the polarisation P is proportional to the polarising field, i. e. , P = k E, k being the dielectric constant, and second that δ being the density of the dielectric, k - 2/ k + 2 ·1/δ = constant. Now it is known that some substances have large negative temperature coefficients for their dielectric constants which cannot thus be accounted for. To provide for this Debye proposed the theory that the molecules were permanently polarised and that they were systematically orientated in the field. This leads to the equation k - 2/ k + 2 = a T -1 + b T -2 , to represent the change of specific inductive capacity with temperature. This theory has been developed by Gans and others, and a number of measurements have been made by Smyth and others, who have found the molecular moments of many substances by measuring the dielectric constants at different temperatures.


1957 ◽  
Vol 35 (12) ◽  
pp. 1534-1541 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. E. Petrie ◽  
R. McIntosh ◽  
E. W. Channen

The temperature dependence of the apparent dielectric constants of various adsorbed polar gases on finely divided, non-porous titanium dioxide has been determined. Within the experimental error, the apparent dielectric constant of the material adsorbed in the monolayer is independent of temperature. The effect of temperature on the dielectric constant for gas adsorbed beyond the monolayer depends on the adsorbate. These results have been interpreted as indicating that molecules initially adsorbed are oscillators, while those adsorbed in later stages of the adsorption process may be rotators or oscillators.


RSC Advances ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 6 (73) ◽  
pp. 69381-69386 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. J. Park ◽  
S. A. N. Yoon ◽  
Y. H. Ahn

In this paper, we demonstrate that terahertz (THz) metamaterials are powerful tools for determination of dielectric constants of polymer films and polar liquids.


The theories of Debye, Onsager, and Falkenhagen, stressing the connexion between the dielectric constant and the other properties of solutions of electrolytes, have focussed a considerable amount of attention on the problem of the accurate determination of the dielectric properties of conducting solutions. The results, however, of work published by various investigators during the past few years show wide discrepancies and, in fact, it can hardly be said that even the sign of the effect of electrolytes upon the dielectric constant of water has yet been established with any degree of certainty. That the results have been so unsatisfactory is not altogether surprising in view of the inherent difficulties of the problem; the system itself is a complicated one, consisting of simple water dipoles, the polymers dihydrol and trihydrol, and the solute molecules or ions dispersed throughout the liquid; furthermore, the experimental technique is frequently complicated by the requirement that the dielectric constants shall be determined at frequencies low enough to permit of computation of the maximum possible polarization of the system, including the rotational polarization of all polar molecules which may be present. Methods involving the direct determination of the capacity of a condenser containing the liquid, whether by capacity-bridge or by resonance, are rendered difficult or inaccurate through the poor capacity sensitivity of such systems in presence of an appreciable ohmic conductivity between the condenser plates. This difficulty is minimized by the use of very high frequencies, and a considerable amount of work has been carried out under these conditions by Wien, Röver, Falkenhagen, and others in connexion with the theory of strong electrolytes. The need has arisen, however, for the values of the dielectric constants of solutions of large polar molecules such as long-chained amino acids, polypeptides, and soluble proteins. Such substances have considerably enhanced periods of relaxation, and proportionately low frequencies of alternating current must be employed to avoid loss of the orientation polarization of the system. In the case of pure egg-albumin solution, dispersion of hertzian waves occurs at all frequencies above about 10 5 sec. -1 . In view of this difficulty it seemed desirable that a thorough investigation should be made into the question as to whether precision results might be obtained from some general method which uses comparatively low frequencies of alternating current. The “force” method theoretically developed by Fürth, in 1924, seemed the most promising. Various modifications of this method have been used by many workers, unfortunately, however, with by no means concordant results, so far as conducting solutions are concerned. It consists broadly in the determination of the force exerted upon an ellipsoid, mounted to rotate about one of its minor axes, in a liquid dielectric across which an alternating field is applied in a direction at right angles to the axis of rotation of the ellipsoid. For such a system Fürth has shown that the torque on the ellipsoid may be expressed by εE 2 sin2θA, where ε represents the dielectric constant of the liquid, E the potential gradient, θ the angle between the major axis of the ellipsoid and the direction of the field, and A a constant involving the dimensions of the ellipsoid. This form of Fürth’s equation applies only so long as the resistance of the liquid dielectric is high relative to that of the ellipsoid itself.


Sensors ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (11) ◽  
pp. 3727 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giovanna Capparelli ◽  
Gennaro Spolverino ◽  
Roberto Greco

Time domain reflectometry (TDR) is one of the most widely used techniques for indirect determination of soil volumetric water content (θ). TDR measures the relative dielectric constant (εr) which, in a three-phase system like the soil, depends on water, air, and solid matrix dielectric constants. Since dielectric constant of water is much larger than the other two, εr of bulk soil mainly depends on water content. In many cases, the application of TDR requires a specific calibration of the relationship θ(εr) to get quantitatively accurate estimates of soil water content. In fact, the relationship θ(εr) is influenced by various soil properties, such as clay content, organic matter content, bulk density, and aggregation. Numerous studies have shown that pyroclastic soils often exhibit a peculiar dielectric behavior. In Campania (Southern Italy) wide mountainous areas are covered by layered pyroclastic deposits of ashes (loamy sands) and pumices (sandy gravels), often involved in the triggering of landslides induced by rainwater infiltration. Reliable field measurements of water content of such soils are therefore important for the assessment of landslide risk. Hence, in this paper, the θ(εr) relationship has been experimentally determined on samples of typical pyroclastic soil of Campania, collected around Sarno, reconstituted with different porosities. The aim of the study is to identify specific calibration relationships for such soils based not only on empirical approaches. In this respect, a three-phase dielectric mixing model with a variable exponent is introduced, and the variable value of the exponent is related to the different dielectric properties of bond and free water within the soil pores.


1986 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 162-166 ◽  
Author(s):  
Herbert W. Roesky ◽  
Jörg Sundermeyer ◽  
Jürgen Schimkowiak ◽  
Thomas Gries ◽  
Mathias Noltemeyer ◽  
...  

The reactions between 1,2,4-thiadiazol-3,5-dicarbonitrile, S(CN)4, and sulfur chlorides (SCl2 and S2Cl2) in the presence of Adogen® 464 (Aldrich) proceeds with formation of S3(CN)4Cl2 (1) and S3(CN)8Cl2 (2). These main products were characterized by X-ray structure determination of an adduct 1a and of 2. This adduct 1a was obtained by addition of the Lewis acid AsF5 in liquid SO2. 1a crystallizes with one SO2 molecule in the space group P21/n with a = 1177.3(2), b = 1082.8(1), c = 1255.3(5) pm, β = 109.73(3)°, Z = 4, V = 1.5061 nm3. It contains two five-membered rings connected by a nitrogen atom. AsF5 is coordinated to one of the ring nitrogen atoms [N(1)] adjacent to the sulfur atom S(1) and C(1)Cl-group. The other ring contains an S(2)-S(3) bond of length 207.7(4) pm. The rings are planar within experimental error. 2 crystallizes in the space group P21/n with a = 782.12(6), b = 1498.1(5), c = 1217.8(2) pm, β = 102.43(1)°, Z = 4, V = 1.3934 nm3. 2 is formed by addition of one molecule of SCl2 to two molecules of S(CN)4.


Whilst it is recognised that the dielectric constant of liquids changes in the frequency range 10 4 - 10 5 kilocycles per second in accordance with the theory of Debye, no systematic examination of the variation of the dielectric constant of simple liquids with frequency appears to have been made at frequencies below 10 3 kc. per second. Exception must be made of the work of Fricke* who showed that the dielectric constant of blood did not change in the range 0­­­­.8 to 4500 kc., and of that of Bryan who recorded no change in the constant for xylene and an increase in the constant for nitrobenzene in the range 200 to1200 kc. In the case of chloroform and benzene a number of independent determinations have been made, eachat a fixed frequency. The values of the constants, however, at frequencies less than 1000kc. fluctuate considerably, for benzene the divergence between the extreme values is about 2­­·0 percent, of the mean, for chloroform about 12­­·5 percent. It is of importance, therefore, to establish whether these fluctuations are due to experimental error or the variation of the constant with frequency. The experiments now described were planned preliminary to work at higher frequencies; measurements of the dielectric constant and of the conductivity of a number of liquids have been made in the frequency range 1 to 10 3 kc. Attention has been directed to examine the variation of these quantities with frequency rather than to obtain­ing their absolute values. Owing to the illness of one of the authors the work had to be discontinued before the original programme had been completed, nevertheless, in view of the increasing importance of the subject the results appear to be of sufficient interest to merit publication. Since the data now reported were obtained, an extremely careful determination of the absolute value of the dielectric constant for benzene at 1000 cycles has been described by Hartshorn and Oliver ( loc. cit. ). They report no change in the constant in the audio frequency range, that is, presumably, below 5 kc., and thus confirm, in part, the data now presented.


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