Title: Experimental Techniques
1Experimental Techniques
2- The interaction between electromagnetic waves and
dielectric materials can be determined by
broadband measurement techniques. - Dielectric relaxation spectroscopy allows the
study of molecular structure, through the
orientation of dipoles under the action of an
electric field. - The experimental devices cover the frequency
range 10-4 -1011 Hz.
Time-domain spectrometer
Frequency-response analyzer
AC-bridges
Reflectometers
Resonance circuits
Cavities and waveguides
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4MEASUREMENT SYSTEMS IN THE TIME DOMAIN
- In linear systems the time-dependent response to
a step function field and the frequency-dependent
response to a sinusoidal electric field are
related through Fourier transforms. - For this reason, from a mathematical point of
view, there is no essential difference between
these two types of measurement. - Over a long period of time the equipment for
measurements in the time domain has been far less
developed than that used in the frequency domain.
- As a result, available experimental data in the
time domain are much less abundant than those in
the frequency domain.
5Time domain spectroscopy
- To cover the lowest frequency range (from 10-4
to 101 Hz), time domain spectrometers have
recently been developed. - In these devices, a voltage step Vo is applied
to the sample placed between the plates of a
plane parallel capacitor, and the current I(t) is
recorded.
6 7?(?)
?(t)
Time Dependent Dielectric Function
Complex Dielectric Function
8- The main item in the equipment is the
electrometer, which must be able to measure
currents as low as 10-16A. - In many cases the applied voltage can be taken
from the internal voltage source of the
electrometer. - Also low-noise cables with high insulation
resistance must be used.
9MEASUREMENT SYSTEMS IN THE FREQUENCY DOMAIN
- In the intermediate frequency range 10-1- 106
Hz, capacitance bridges have been the common
tools used to measure dielectric permittivities. - The devices are based on the Wheatstone bridge
principle where the arms are capacitance-resistanc
e networks. - The principle of measurement of capacitance
bridges is based on the balance of the bridge
placing the test sample in one of the arms.
10- The sample is represented by an RC network in
parallel or series. - When the null detector of the bridge is at its
minimum value (as close as possible to zero), the
equations of the balanced bridge provide the
values of the capacitance and loss factor (or
conductivity) for the test sample - Frequency response analyzers have proved to be
very useful in measuring dielectric
permittivities in the frequency range 10-2 - 106
Hz,. - An a.c. voltage V1 is applied to the sample, and
then a resistor R, or alternatively a
current-to-voltage converter for low frequencies,
converts the sample current Is, into a voltage V2
. - By comparing the amplitude and the phase angle
between these two voltages, the complex impedance
of the sample Zs can be calculated as
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14Conductivity
15- Owing to parasitic inductances, the
high-frequency limit is about 1 MHz, - It is necessary to be very careful with the
temperature control, and for this purpose it is
advisable to measure the temperature as close as
possible to the sample. - At frequencies ranging from 1 MHz to 10 GHz, the
inductance of the connecting cables contributes
to the measured impedance.
16- At frequencies above 1 GHz the technique often
used to obtain dielectric spectra is
reflectometry. - The technique is based on the reflection of an
electric wave, transported through a coaxial
line, in a dielectric sample cell attached at the
end of the line. - In this case, the reflective coefficient is a
function of the complex permittivity of the
sample, and the electric and geometric cell
lengths.
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18Reflection coefficient
reflected voltage
Incoming voltage
Propagation coefficient
Reflection at the beginning of the line
Attenuation coefficient
19IMMITTANCE ANALYSISBasic Immittance Functions
- In many cases, it is possible to reproduce the
electric properties of a dipolar system by means
of passive elements such as resistors, capacitors
or combined elements. - One of the advantages of the models is that they
often easily describe the response of a system to
polarization processes. - However, it is necessary to stress that the
models in general only provide an approximate way
to represent the actual behavior of the system. - The analysis of dielectric materials is commonly
made in terms of the complex permittivity
function ? or its inverse, the electric modulus
M
20- electrical impedance and admittance are the
appropriate functions to represent the response
of the corresponding equivalent circuits. - As a consequence, the four basic immittance
functions are permittivity, electric modulus,
impedance and admittance. - They are related by the following formulae
21?
??
tan??/?
M
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23Mixed Circuit. Debye Equations
? RC2
C1 ??Co
C2 (?o-??) Co
24- As shown before, Debye equation can be obtained
in three different ways - (1) on the grounds of some simplifying
assumptions concerning rotational Brownian
motion, - (2) assuming time-dependent orientational
depolarization of a material governed by first
order kinetics, and - (3) from the linear response theory assuming the
time dipole correlation function described by a
simple decreasing exponential. - The actual expressions are given by
25- Under certain circumstances, the admittance is
increased on account of hopping conductivity
processes. Then, a conductivity term must be
included - ?o is a d.c. conductivity.
- However, the presence of interactions leads to
the inclusion of a frequency dependent term in
the conductivity in such a way that
26EMPIRICAL MODELS TO REPRESENT DIELECTRIC DATA -
Retardation Time Spectra
- The assumptions upon which the Debye equations
are based imply, in practice, that very few
systems display Debye behavior - In fact, relaxations in complex and disordered
systems deviate from this simple behavior. - An alternative way to extend the scope of the
Debye dispersion relations is to include more
than one relaxation time in the physical
description of relaxation phenomena. -
27- The term N(?) represents the distribution of
relaxation (or better retardation) times
representing the fraction of the total dispersion
that has a retardation time between ? and ?d? - The real and imaginary parts of the complex
permittivity are given in terms of the
retardation times by - Alternatively, the retardation spectrum can be
defined as
28Retardation time spectra
- Advantages
- Better separation of processes
- Processes are narrower than in frequency domain
- Disadvantages
- Require numerical evaluation of the spectrum.
- No physical sense
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32Cole - Cole Equation
- Experimental data (? vs ?)rarely fit to a
Debye semicircle. - Studying several organic crystalline compounds,
Cole and Cole found that the centers of the
experimental arcs were displaced below the real
axis, the experimental data thus having the shape
of a depressed arc.
331-?0,5 1
Low frequencies
high frequencies
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35- The corresponding equivalent circuit is
- The admittance is given by
- Note that the circuit contains a new element,
namely a constant phase element (CPE), the
admittance of which is given by - The admittance reduces to R-1 when ? 0
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37When we can use Cole Cole equation
- Symmetric relaxations.
- In general all Secondary relaxations can be
fitted by Cole Cole equation. - The (1-?) parameter, give us an idea about how
distributed is the relaxation (how broad it is). - In general the (1-?) parameter, must increase
with the temperature.
38Fuoss- Kirkwood Equation
- 1941 - Fuoss and Kirkwood propose to extend the
Debye equation, in order to fit symmetric
functions. - Assuming an Arrhenius dependency of the
relaxation time with the temperature, it is
possible to express the FK equation as a T
function.
39When its possible to use the FK eq.
- Secondary relaxations Symmetric relaxations.
- Advantages The temperature dependencies of the
loss factor have a very simple expression. - There are some relation between the m parameter
of the FK equation and the (1- ?) parameter of
the CC equation.
40a1-?
41Davison Cole Equation
- The Cole Cole and Fuoss Kirkwood equations
are very useful for symmetric relaxations. - However, experimental data obtained from ? vs.
? plots show skewness on the high frequency
side. - For this reason, Davison and Cole (1950) proposed
to fit the experimental data with the following
equation
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43Low frequencies
high frequencies
44Characteristic maximum
? maximum
?max ? ?CD
45Low frequencies
high frequencies
46Havriliak - Negami Equation
- The generalization of the Cole-Cole, and
Davison-Cole equation was proposed by Havriliak
and Negami (1967). - The flexibility of the HN, five-parameter
equation, makes it one of the most widely used
methods of representing dielectric relaxation
data. - The formal expression is
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48Depressed (1-?)
Asymmetric ?
Low frequencies
high frequencies
49When we can use HN eq.
- For all dielectric processed,
- We must use for the main relaxation process (? -
process) - For secondary relaxation we can use, taking ?
1. - Advantages flexibility
- Disadvantages number of parameters
50KWW Model
- Williams and Watt proposed to use a stretched
exponential for the decay function ?(t), in a
similar way to Kohlrausch many years ago. - In this way, the normalized dielectric
permittivity can be written as
51KWW - Model
- The resulting expression does not have a closed
form but can be expressed as a series expansion - where ? is the gamma function For ? 1 the Debye
equations are recovered.
52- For low values of ?? and ?gt 0.25, the convergence
of the series of the KWW eq. is slow, and the
following equation is proposed - The KWW equations are nonsymmetrical in shape and
for this reason it is particularly useful to
describe the nonsymmetrical ?-relaxations.
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54Thermostimulated Depolarization andPolarization
T
T
- Due to the fact that the charges are virtually
immobile at low temperatures, it is possible to
study the depolarization as a temperature function
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56Poly 3 (Fluor) bencyl-methacrylate
57- Thermostimulated depolarization currents is a
complementary technique for the evaluation of the
dielectric properties. - Its also useful for the following of the
chemical reaction in which the mobility of the
dipoles change due to structural changes. - Could give information about the fine structure
of the materials - Its equivalent frequency is lower than the
dielectric spectroscopy
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60Summary
- Experimental techniques
- Time domain
- Frequency domain
- Frequency Response Analyzer (ac bridges)
- RF Analyzer (reflectometry)
- Complex dielectric Function it is related with
the Time Dependant dielectric function by means
of the Fourier Transform
61Summary
- Immitance Functions
- Electric Modulus
- Permittivity
- Impedance
- Admitance
62Summary
- Fitting of the experimental data
- Symmetric relaxation broader than Debye
relaxation - Cole-Cole equation
- Fouss Kirkwood
- Asymmetric relaxation
- Cole-Davison
- Asymmetric and broader relaxations
- Havriliak-Negami
- KWW
63Summary
- Another fitting procedures
- Retardation time spectra
- Equivalent circuits
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65?