Abstract
New functional groups containing Al-C bonds and Al2O3 molecules are formed in the surface layer of the polymer during depositing of aluminum on polyethylene films. This effect is absent when Au is deposited on the films. For capacitors with Al and Au electrodes, processes of high-voltage contact polarization and conductivity are studied at various configurations of the external electric field. If Al-C organometallic bonds and Al2O3 or, for example, Al-O-C bonds are formed in the surface layer during application of high electric fields, a number of dielectric “anomalies” are observed. They manifest themselves as the fact that an increase in the amount of cycles of a bipolar saw-tooth voltage is accompanied by a marked increase in the residual surface charge density. At such a configuration of the external field, a decrease in its frequency (for region, where dE/dt > 0) leads to a marked reduction in high-voltage dielectric permittivity to negative values. This phenomenon is explained by the fact that, along with the external field, an internal field appears owing to formation of the space charge near metal/polymer boundaries.
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