Lecture4 Local Field PH611
Lecture4 Local Field PH611
Lecture4 Local Field PH611
Equation
• "Particles", i.e. atoms or molecules in a liquid or solid are
basking in electrical fields - the external field that we
apply from the outside is not necessarily all they "see" in
terms of fields.
– First, of course, there is a tremendous electrical field
inside any atom.
– Second, we have fields between atoms, quite evident
for ionic crystals, but also possible for other cases of
bonding.
– All these fields average to zero –
macroscopically
– What is microscopic view?
• Here, we are looking the effect of external
field on atoms and molecules.
• what an atom "sees" as local electrical field
or the local field Eloc to be the field felt by
one particle (mostly an atom) of the
material.
• we may express Eloc as a superposition of
the external field Eex and some field Emat
introduced by the surrounding material.
• Eloc = Eex + Emat
Internal/ local field:
When dielectric material is placed in the external
electric field, it is polarized creating electric
dipoles. Each dipole sets electric field in the
vicinity. Hence the net electric field at any point
within the dielectric material is given by:
The sum of external field and the field due to
all dipoles surrounding that point. This net
field is called “internal or local field or Lorentz
field”
Lorentz model.
• Decompose the total field into four components.
Emat
Shape Axis N
Sphere any 1/3
Thin slab normal 1
Thin slab in plane 0
Cylinder Longitudinal 0
Cylinder Transverse ½
Hence
• 4th component Eext
• 3rd component Ep = – P/ 0 (for ‘thin slab’, -ve sign shows
direction)
• 2nd component EL = P/3 0 (for ‘sphere’)
• 1st component Enear = 0 for isotropic materials (cubic), which is easy
to imagine.
• Hence
Eloc = Eext – P /0 + P /3o +0
(ii) The
tangential / transverse component perpendicular to the radial
component is given by
Eθ = μsinθ / 4πε0r3
E
V(r,θ) = (1/4πε0)(μcosθ/r2) Eθ Er
μ=q.dx P
-q +q
θ
dx
Consider a dielectric material placed in external electric field of strength E
and also assuming an array of equidistant dipoles within the dielectric
material, which are aligned in the field direction as shown in the fig:
Let us find the local field at ‘X’ due to all dipoles in the
array.
The field at X due to dipole A is given by;
N 1 r 1
3 0 2 r 2
or,
N n 2 1
2 . Lorentz-Lorentz Equation
3 0 n 2
• If the material consists of different types of molecules
then
r 1 1
r 2 3 0
N
i
i i