A dielectric is a material whose electrons are tightly bound to their atoms — they don’t migrate when an Electric field is applied. The material can still respond to a field, but only through polarization: bound electrons shift slightly relative to their nuclei, creating microscopic dipoles. No net charge flows.
This is the defining contrast with a conductor, where outer-shell electrons are loosely bound and free to migrate as a current.
Permittivity
A dielectric is characterized by its Permittivity , where the relative permittivity measures how strongly the medium polarizes. Some examples:
| Material | |
|---|---|
| Vacuum | 1 (exact) |
| Air | 1.0006 |
| Teflon (PTFE) | 2.1 |
| Quartz | 3.8 |
| Glass | 4–10 |
| Mica | 5.4 |
| Water | 80 |
Water’s huge comes from its permanent molecular dipole (oxygen pulls electrons from hydrogens), which reorients with the field.
Why dielectrics matter
Three practical reasons engineers care:
- Capacitors. The capacitance for a parallel-plate capacitor scales linearly with of the filling material. A dielectric multiplies the capacitance for the same physical size.
- Transmission lines. The phase velocity on a TEM line filled with dielectric is — signals travel slower in dielectric, which sets the wavelength and propagation timing.
- Insulation. A perfect dielectric has (no current flow), so it isolates conductors at different potentials. Real dielectrics have small but nonzero , leading to gradual leakage.
Three idealizations
The Electromagnetics conventions:
- Linear: proportional to . Holds at moderate field strengths.
- Isotropic: parallel to (no directional preference). Crystals like quartz are anisotropic, with a tensor.
- Homogeneous: doesn’t vary with position. Composite materials and graded dielectrics violate this.
Together: with a position-independent scalar.
Dielectric breakdown
Even an ideal dielectric breaks down at high enough field. The threshold is the dielectric strength — beyond it, bound electrons ionize and a conduction avalanche begins. The material’s resistivity collapses, often with permanent damage. See Polarization (dielectric) for typical strength values.
This sets the maximum operating voltage for capacitors: , where is dielectric thickness. The trade-off in capacitor design: high packs more capacitance into less volume, but the dielectric strength may be lower (or its breakdown more catastrophic) than a simpler material.
Compared with a conductor
| Property | Conductor | Dielectric |
|---|---|---|
| Free electrons | Many | Effectively none |
| Very large | Very small | |
| inside | in equilibrium | , nonzero |
| Surface charge | Bound polarization charges | |
| Current | ideally |
The duality is striking: both materials respond to applied , but the response mechanism is different. Conductors expel the field by moving charges to the surface; dielectrics partially cancel it by polarizing internally.