Abstract

Electroconvective effects are being studied in films of dielectric liquids, using an electron beam as an injecting electrode. The experiments are performed on a dual electron beam system in which one beam is used to charge up the free surface of a thin layer of the liquid, the other beam is directed across the surface and is used to determine the surface potential of the sample. The conduction properties of a silicone fluid (Dow Corning 703) have been determined, using this system. At low currents the conduction is space-charge-limited. Above the critical voltage, V0 = 99μη/ε, the space-charge-limited conduction becomes unstable; cellular convection motion of the liquid occurs, and there is a transition between space-charge-limited conduction and convection-enhanced conduction. Thus, the conductivity of the liquid increases due to the bulk motion of the fluid. A further effect of convection can be seen in the charging transients. For low values of current the voltage follows a charge-up curve which is characteristic of a space-charge-limited capacitor. For larger currents a well-defined peak occurs in the charging curves and this is indicative of a change in the conduction properties of the fluid. The time delay from current onset to the onset of convection has been measured as a function of current, for several sample thicknesses. These time delays are in close agreement with theoretical values calculated from a heuristic model of transient stability in space-charge-limited current flow.

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