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Polyvinyl fluoride electrical properties

PVF films exhibit high dielectric constant and a high dielectric strength.96 Typical electrical properties for standard polyvinyl fluoride films are shown along with its physical properties in Table 3.11. [Pg.52]

Polymers that exhibit the piezoelectric effect include polyvinyl chloride, polyvinyl fluoride, and difluor polyethylene. These polymers acquire their properties through technological processing. The thin plastic foil samples are exposed to strong electric fields and then cooled to room temperature. This process results in a polarization of the material. [Pg.250]

Certain polymers, such as polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) and polyvinyl fluoride (PVF), possess special properties in the film form, caileApiezoelectricity and pyroelectricity. Piezoelectricity is electric polarization of a film produced by mechanical strain in some crystals. The polarization is proportional to the amount of strain and changes sign with it. The reverse is true and an electrical polarization induces a mechanical strain in piezoelectric sensors. Pyroelectricity is electric polarization of a film induced by thermal absorption in some polymer crystals. The induced polarization is proportional to the level of thermal change. These properties can be used in the manufacture of transducers, microphones, loudspeakers, pressure gauges, pickup heads, hydrophones, motion sensors, and other devices from biaxially oriented PVDF films. Table 13.37 gives the properties of a piezoelectric film of polyvinylidene fluoride. [Pg.427]

Some measurements of this property have been made in a range of electrically conducting polymers. These include epoxy resin/polyaniline-dodecylbenzene sulfonic acid blends [38], polystyrene-black polyphenylene oxide copolymers [38], semiconductor-based polypyrroles [33], titanocene polyesters [40], boron-containing polyvinyl alcohol [41], copper-filled epoxy resin [42], polyethylidene dioxy thiophene-polystyrene sulfonate, polyvinyl chloride, polyethylene oxide [43], polycarbonate/acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene composites [44], polyethylene oxide complexes with sodium lanthanum tetra-fluoride [45], chlorine-substituted polyaniline [46], polyvinyl pyrolidine-polyvinyl alcohol coupled with potassium bromate tetrafluoromethane sulfonamide [47], doped polystyrene block polyethylene [38, 39], polypyrrole [48], polyaniline-polyamide composites [49], and polydimethyl siloxane-polypyrrole composites [50]. [Pg.135]


See other pages where Polyvinyl fluoride electrical properties is mentioned: [Pg.433]    [Pg.773]    [Pg.577]    [Pg.255]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.52 ]




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Polyvinyl fluoride

Polyvinyl fluoride properties

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