Abstract

AbstractCommonly used liquids have a powerful effect on producing electrostatic patterns in dielectric surfaces. During evaporation, charges are built‐up on dielectric surfaces that support liquids but with an important difference: negative charges appear where the liquid evaporates while positive ones are formed within the residual liquid. After complete evaporation, the result is a mosaic of stable and fixed surface charges resulting in electrostatic potential gradients as large as 20 kV m−1, but charge partitioning can be suppressed with common surfactants. The results can be understood considering the Maxwell–Wagner effect where charge accumulation takes place during current flowing across the interface. All these findings help to explain the hitherto challenging problem of static electricity and the appearance of the ubiquitous electrostatic patterns in dielectrics, what it must be helpful for the controlling of electrostatic charges in industry or in common laboratory activities.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call