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  2. Permittivity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permittivity

    Shqip; Slovenčina ... The vacuum permittivity ε o (also called permittivity of free space or the electric constant) is the ratio ... perfect dielectric lossless ...

  3. Dielectric - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dielectric

    In electromagnetism, a dielectric (or dielectric medium) is an electrical insulator that can be polarised by an applied electric field.When a dielectric material is placed in an electric field, electric charges do not flow through the material as they do in an electrical conductor, because they have no loosely bound, or free, electrons that may drift through the material, but instead they ...

  4. Template : Classification of materials based on permittivity

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Classification_of...

    Classification of materials based on permittivity ⁠ ε r ″ / ε r ′ ⁠ Current conduction Field propagation; 0: perfect dielectric lossless medium ≪ 1: low-conductivity material poor conductor

  5. Category:Dielectrics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Dielectrics

    This page was last edited on 28 November 2021, at 16:06 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.

  6. Interface conditions for electromagnetic fields - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interface_conditions_for...

    The most usual and simple example is a fully reflecting (electric wall) boundary - the outer medium is considered as a perfect conductor. In some cases, it is more complicated: for example, the reflection-less (i.e. open) boundaries are simulated as perfectly matched layer or magnetic wall that do not resume to a single interface.

  7. Dielectric strength - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dielectric_strength

    Dielectric films tend to exhibit greater dielectric strength than thicker samples of the same material. For instance, the dielectric strength of silicon dioxide films of thickness around 1 μm is about 0.5 GV/m. [3] However very thin layers (below, say, 100 nm) become partially conductive because of electron tunneling.

  8. Relative permittivity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relative_permittivity

    The relative permittivity (in older texts, dielectric constant) is the permittivity of a material expressed as a ratio with the electric permittivity of a vacuum. A dielectric is an insulating material, and the dielectric constant of an insulator measures the ability of the insulator to store electric energy in an electrical field.

  9. Molar refractivity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molar_refractivity

    For a perfect dielectric which is made of one type of molecule, the molar refractivity is proportional to the polarizability of a single molecule of the substance. For real materials, intermolecular interactions (the effect of the induced dipole moment of one molecule on the field felt by nearby molecules) give rise to a density dependence.