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Anisotropic ionic media

Figure 12.22. Schematic illustration of anisotropic ionic conduction in nanochannels with nanotemplates of azo LCBC films. The complexes PEO+UCF3SO3 were prepared at low-, medium-, and high salt concentration. Source Reproduced from Li et al., 2007a. Figure 12.22. Schematic illustration of anisotropic ionic conduction in nanochannels with nanotemplates of azo LCBC films. The complexes PEO+UCF3SO3 were prepared at low-, medium-, and high salt concentration. Source Reproduced from Li et al., 2007a.
An applied electric field can be the electric held component of an electromagnetic wave, in which case electronic excitations or other optical responses may ensue. These are the topic of the next chapter. Here, the concern is with electrostatics, specihcally, the dielectric, or insulative, properties of materials. In an electrical conductor, an applied electric held, E, produces an electric current - ions, in the case of an ionic conductor, or electrons, in the case of an electronic conductor. Electrical conductivity has already been examined in earlier chapters. In insulating solids, the topic of the current discussion, the response to an applied electric held is a static spatial displacement of the bound ions or electrons, resulting in an electrical polarization, P, or net dipole moment (charge separahon) per unit volume, which is a vector quantity. In a homogeneous linear and isotropic medium, the polarization and electric held are aligned. In an anisotropic medium, this need not be so. The fth component of the polarization is related to the jth component of the electric held by ... [Pg.364]


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