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Dielectric intrinsic

Capacitor There are several applications for plastics in electrical devices that use the intrinsic characteristics of the plastics for the effect on the electrical circuit. The most obvious of these is the use of plastics particularly in the form of thin films as the dielectric in capacitors. TP polyester films such as Mylar are especially useful for this type of application because of the high dielectric strength in conjunction with a good dielectric constant. [Pg.228]

Electret Another application for plastics which uses the intrinsic properties is in elec-trets (a dielectric body in which a permanent state of electric polarization has been set up). Some materials such as highly polar plastics can be cooled from the melt under an intense electrical field and develop a permanent electrical field that is constantly on or constantly renewable. [Pg.228]

A number of areas in which plastics are used in electrical and electronic design have been covered there are many more. Examples include fiber optics, computer hardware and software, radomes for radar transmitters, sound transmitters, and appliances. Reviewed were the basic use and behavior for plastics as an insulator or as a dielectric material and applying design parameters. The effect of field intensity, frequency, environmental effects, temperature, and time were reviewed as part of the design process. Several special applications for plastics based on intrinsic properties of plastics materials were also reviewed. [Pg.229]

Other areas such as static electricity and its use and control were not discussed since they represent a different type of application (2). As new materials became available and the electrical art continued to develop, the uses for plastics in electrical applications has increase both in the basic application as a dielectric and in special applications using the special intrinsic properties of the plastics. [Pg.229]

However, a number of examples have been found where addition of bromine is not stereospecifically anti. For example, the addition of Bf2 to cis- and trans-l-phenylpropenes in CCI4 was nonstereospecific." Furthermore, the stereospecificity of bromine addition to stilbene depends on the dielectric constant of the solvent. In solvents of low dielectric constant, the addition was 90-100% anti, but with an increase in dielectric constant, the reaction became less stereospecific, until, at a dielectric constant of 35, the addition was completely nonstereospecific.Likewise in the case of triple bonds, stereoselective anti addition was found in bromination of 3-hexyne, but both cis and trans products were obtained in bromination of phenylacetylene. These results indicate that a bromonium ion is not formed where the open cation can be stabilized in other ways (e.g., addition of Br+ to 1 -phenylpropene gives the ion PhC HCHBrCH3, which is a relatively stable benzylic cation) and that there is probably a spectrum of mechanisms between complete bromonium ion (2, no rotation) formation and completely open-cation (1, free rotation) formation, with partially bridged bromonium ions (3, restricted rotation) in between. We have previously seen cases (e.g., p. 415) where cations require more stabilization from outside sources as they become intrinsically less stable themselves. Further evidence for the open cation mechanism where aryl stabilization is present was reported in an isotope effect study of addition of Br2 to ArCH=CHCHAr (Ar = p-nitrophenyl, Ar = p-tolyl). The C isotope effect for one of the double bond carbons (the one closer to the NO2 group) was considerably larger than for the other one. ... [Pg.973]

Continuum models remove the difficulties associated with the statistical sampling of phase space, but they do so at the cost of losing molecular-level detail. In most continuum models, dynamical properties associated with the solvent and with solute-solvent interactions are replaced by equilibrium averages. Furthermore, the choice of where the primary subsystem ends and the dielectric continuum begins , i.e., the boundary and the shape of the cavity containing the primary subsystem, is ambiguous (since such a boundary is intrinsically nonphysical). Typically this boundary is placed on some sort of van der Waals envelope of either the solute or the solute plus a few key solvent molecules. [Pg.3]

Table 18.2. Intrinsic Dielectric Strength (Breakdown Voltage)... [Pg.275]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.494 ]




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