PeterP wrote:
Dan,
Thanks for your reply. Like you I have more question than answers but here is my attempt to respond to your points
The domain boundary is where different lattice orientations meet. Tom would probably be a good person to explain details of how domain rotation occurs.
You mean ee-tom? Yeah that would be great if he could clarify this.
PeterP wrote:
However domains do rotate and this can be seen using a microscope.
See, this really bothers me. I agree that a domain boundary is simply where different lattice orientations meet. My problem is this: a domain is still a solid region inside a solid. How can it possibly rotate? It's like putting a quarter into a coin slot, but only half way, then trying to rotate the coin.
I thought "well, maybe it's just the molecules/unit-cells themselves that rotate in place to re-orient, but that would take way too much heat since you have to overcome the much lower energy state of the (covalent?) bonds that give you your lattice. You're basically melting the crystal into an amorphous substance so the molecules can rotate freely, then coolling to allow the crystal to reform in it's new orientation under the E-field. No such temperatures are used though, and it would probably carbonize the PET if if was that high.
I'm just having a hard time picturing domain rotation.
PeterP wrote:
Friction during rotation would cause losses. High K dielectrics are lossy but not that bad.
You mean friction during domain rotation, right? Not dipole rotation? If that's the case, then I gotta disagree - my understanding is that the domain only rotates under poling conditions, not during everyday use conditions - that's only dipole rotation.
I look at it like this (warning - possibly bad analogy):
Take a metal spring that's say, 2 inches long. It takes a certain amount of energy to compress it full - say 2 joules.
Now use whatever amount of energy you need to physically stretch the spring with brute force, to the point that when it springs back, it's now twice as long - 4 inches - in its relaxed state. But, you've changed the gross morphology of the spring without changing it at the grain level - the level that gives it the elastomeric qualities. Indeed, if you now compress it maximally, you'd probbly find that it only takes the same amount of energy (2 joules) or even slightly less, to compress it, which is of course the same as saying how much energy it can store.
Now, if you take the same spring and heat it properly to the right temperature then stretch it out to 4 inches (relaxed length), then cool/anneal it properly, you'd now find that if you compress it maximally, it would take more than 2 joules (maybe 3.5 or something, probably not double) to maximally compress it. Again, this is also how much energy it can store.
The process of re-annealing the spring to re-orient & resize the grains for the longer length is not "lost" exactly, it has instead gone into changing the material so that it is able to store more total energy on compression and release it during decompression.
I picture poling the same way. The poling reorients the domains, but after poling, during regular use, the energy has simply gone towards allowing more energy to be stored and released by maximizing the number of dipoles that can be rotated a full 180 degrees under a opposite polarity field.
Anyway, that's how I understand it, but I also am not satisfied about other aspects, such as the molecular scale explanation of "domain rotation"
PeterP wrote:
The eestor dielectric has particles with alumina coating which defines the boundary, are these the grains you mean? Each particle is one domain.
I believe Christine explained this a while back...
A bulk crystal will normally be polycrystaline and composed of grains (I assumed these were delineated by boundaries consisting variously of lattice mismatch/imperfections, chemical impuries, etc), with a various number of domains inside the grain. But with EEStor's purity level the grains will typically contain only one domain. So, when you cryogenically fracture the crystal it will typically fracture along the weakest surfaces, which will be the grain boundaries. So you end up with particles consisting of only one grain (which is important for things like aging effects, breakdown, etc), but they also now consist of only one domain as well. IIRC. So the alumina coating will be coincident with the grain boundary, not define it (a niggling distinction, sorry). It works out to the same thing.
PeterP wrote:
Domains will rotate due to the field, heat is used to take the material above the Curie point so that when cooled below the Curie point they will “set” in the fully oriented position.
Yes, I'm just accepting this as fact and carrying on from there in spite of the fact that I don't understand "domain rotation" at the bulk/molecular level :) I know that's a dumb thing to do, but I've been dumber.
PeterP wrote:
The dipole moment will be larger but my arguement is that this represents stored but unrecoverable energy.
See above. I agree that it represents "stored" energy, but only in terms of how it was used to change the material at the grain/domain level, like re-annealing a spring. I also agree that it is "unrecoverable" in a sense, but the end result is that the material now has a higher energy storage density characteristic. I think this is the process used to make old standard electrolytic capacitors, but I can't recall exactly. CapMan would be the expert on that.
PeterP wrote:
I don’t believe that the EESU is used in reverse polarity. Wouldn’t this mean that each charge/discharge cycle requires a change of polarity?
No, because in everyday use, after manufacture (poling, etc) the applied field doesn't change the domain orientation, just the dipole orientation. Again, IIRC.
PeterP wrote:
The volume relationship is that for spherical particles 78% is the total volume of tightly packed spheres, the rest is PET. The coating on the spheres is 6% of the volume of the spheres. So my figures are the result of my calculation and can be queried. I have used spheres because that’s what Christine said. ( I think this changes during sintering but I don’t know how)
I know, that's one of the problems. The WIPO gives volume percent material relationships that are inconsistent with their narrow particle size figures in their 3rd party PR, and with Christine's and your analysis (shrug). I can't comment about changes during sintering I'm afraid.