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Electrostatics is a branch of physics that deals with the phenomena and properties of stationary or slow-moving electric charges with no acceleration.

Since classical physics, it has been known that some materials such as amber attract lightweight particles after rubbing. The Greek word for amber, ήλεκτρον electron, was the source of the word 'electricity'. Electrostatic phenomena arise from the forces that electric charges exert on each other. Such forces are described by Coulomb's law. Even though electrostatically induced forces seem to be rather weak, the electrostatic force between e.g. an electron and a proton, that together make up a hydrogen atom, is about 36 orders of magnitude stronger than the gravitational force acting between them.

There are many examples of electrostatic phenomena, from those as simple as the attraction of the plastic wrap to your hand after you remove it from a package, and the attraction of paper to a charged scale, to the apparently spontaneous explosion of grain silos, the damage of electronic components during manufacturing, and the operation of photocopiers. Electrostatics involves the buildup of charge on the surface of objects due to contact with other surfaces. Although charge exchange happens whenever any two surfaces contact and separate, the effects of charge exchange are usually only noticed when at least one of the surfaces has a high resistance to electrical flow. This is because the charges that transfer to or from the highly resistive surface are more or less trapped there for a long enough time for their effects to be observed. These charges then remain on the object until they either bleed off to ground or are quickly neutralized by a discharge: e.g., the familiar phenomenon of a static 'shock' is caused by the neutralization of charge built up in the body from contact with insulated surfaces.

Coulomb's law
Main article: Coulomb's law

We begin with the magnitude of the electrostatic force (in newtons) between two point charges q and Q (in coulombs). It is convenient to label one of these charges, q, as a test charge, and call Q a source charge. As we develop the theory, more source charges will be added. If r is the distance (in meters) between two charges, then the force is:

\( F = \frac{1}{4\pi \varepsilon_0}\frac{qQ}{r^2}= k_e\frac{qQ}{r^2}\, , \)

where ε0 is the vacuum permittivity, or permittivity of free space:[1]

\( \varepsilon_0 = {10^{-9}\over 36\pi} \;\; \mathrm{C^2\ N^{-1}\ m^{-2}}\approx 8.854\ 187\ 817 \times 10^{-12} \;\; \mathrm{C^2\ N^{-1}\ m^{-2}}. \)

The SI units of ε0 are equivalently  A2s4 kg−1m−3 or C2N−1m−2 or F m−1. Coulomb's constant is:

\( k_e \approx \frac{1}{4\pi\varepsilon_0}\approx 8.987\ 551\ 787 \times 10^9 \;\; \mathrm{N\ m^2\ C}^{-2}. \)

The use of ε0 instead of k0 in expressing Coulomb's Law is related to the fact that the force is inversely proportional to the surface area of a sphere with radius equal to the separation between the two charges.

A single proton has a charge of e, and the electron has a charge of −e, where,

\( e \approx 1.602\ 176\ 565 \times 10^{-19}\;\; \mathrm{C}. \)

These physical constants (ε0, k0, e) are currently defined so that ε0 and k0 are exactly defined, and e is a measured quantity.

Electric field
The electrostatic field (lines with arrows) of a nearby positive charge (+) causes the mobile charges in conductive objects to separate due to electrostatic induction. Negative charges (blue) are attracted and move to the surface of the object facing the external charge. Positive charges (red) are repelled and move to the surface facing away. These induced surface charges are exactly the right size and shape so their opposing electric field cancels the electric field of the external charge throughout the interior of the metal. Therefore the electrostatic field everywhere inside a conductive object is zero, and the electrostatic potential is constant.

Electric field lines are useful for visualizing the electric field. Field lines begin on positive charge and terminate on negative charge. Electric field lines are parallel to the direction of the electric field, and the density of these field lines is a measure of the magnitude of the electric field at any given point. The electric field, \( \vec{E} \), (in units of volts per meter) is a vector field that can be defined everywhere, except at the location of point charges (where it diverges to infinity). It is convenient to place a hypothetical test charge at a point (where no charges are present). By Coulomb's Law, this test charge will experience a force that can be used to define the electric field as follow

\( \vec{F} = q \vec{E}.\, \)

(See the Lorentz equation if the charge is not stationary.)

Consider a collection of N particles of charge \( Q_i \), located at points \( \vec r_i \) (called source points), the electric field at \vec r (called the field point) is:

\( \vec{E}(\vec r) =\frac{1}{4\pi \varepsilon _0}\sum_{i=1}^N \frac{\widehat\mathcal R_i Q_i}{\left \|\mathcal\vec R_i \right \|^2} , \)

where \( \vec\mathcal R_i = \vec r - \vec r_i \( , is the displacement vector from a source point \( \vec r_i \) to the field point \(\vec r \) , and \( \widehat\mathcal R_i = \vec\mathcal R_i / \left \|\vec\mathcal R_i \right \| \) is a unit vector that indicates the direction of the field. For a single point charge at the origin, the magnitude of this electric field is \( E =k_eQ/\mathcal R^2, \)and points away from that charge is positive. That fact that the force (and hence the field) can be calculated by summing over all the contributions due to individual source particles is an example of the superposition principle. The electric field produced by a distribution of charges is given by the volume charge density \rho (\vec r) and can be obtained by converting this sum into a triple integral:

\( \vec{E}(\vec r)= \frac {1}{4 \pi \varepsilon_0} \iiint \frac {\vec r - \vec r \,'}{\left \| \vec r - \vec r \,' \right \|^3} \rho (\vec r \,')\operatorname{d}^3 r\,' \)

Gauss's law

Gauss's law states that "the total electric flux through any closed hypothetical surface of any shape drawn in an electric field is proportional to the total electric charge enclosed within the surface." Mathematically, Gauss's law takes the form of an integral equation:

\( \oint_S\vec{E} \cdot\mathrm{d}\vec{A} = \frac{1}{\varepsilon_0}\,Q_{enclosed}=\int_V{\rho\over\varepsilon_0}\cdot\operatorname{d}^3 r, \)

where \( \operatorname{d}^3 r =\mathrm{d}x \ \mathrm{d}y \ \mathrm{d}z \)is a volume element. If the charge is distributed over a surface or along a line, replace \( \rho\mathrm{d}^3r by \sigma\mathrm{d}A or \lambda\mathrm{d}\ell \) . The Divergence Theorem allows Gauss's Law to be written in differential form:

\( \vec{\nabla}\cdot\vec{E} = {\rho\over\varepsilon_0}. \)

where \vec{\nabla} \cdot is the divergence operator.
Poisson and Laplace equations

The definition of electrostatic potential, combined with the differential form of Gauss's law (above), provides a relationship between the potential Φ and the charge density ρ:

\( {\nabla}^2 \phi = - {\rho\over\varepsilon_0}. \)

This relationship is a form of Poisson's equation. In the absence of unpaired electric charge, the equation becomes Laplace's equation:

\( {\nabla}^2 \phi = 0, \)

Electrostatic approximation

The validity of the electrostatic approximation rests on the assumption that the electric field is irrotational:

\( \vec{\nabla}\times\vec{E} = 0. \)

From Faraday's law, this assumption implies the absence or near-absence of time-varying magnetic fields:

\({\partial\vec{B}\over\partial t} = 0. \)

In other words, electrostatics does not require the absence of magnetic fields or electric currents. Rather, if magnetic fields or electric currents do exist, they must not change with time, or in the worst-case, they must change with time only very slowly. In some problems, both electrostatics and magnetostatics may be required for accurate predictions, but the coupling between the two can still be ignored.

Electrostatic potential

Because the electric field is irrotational, it is possible to express the electric field as the gradient of a scalar function,\phi, called the electrostatic potential (also known as the voltage). An electric field, E, points from regions of high electric potential to regions of low electric potential, expressed mathematically as

\( \vec{E} = -\vec{\nabla}\phi. \)

The Gradient Theorem can be used to establish that the electrostatic potential is the amount of work per unit charge required to move a charge from point a to point b is the following line integral:

\( -\int_a^b{\vec{E}\cdot \mathrm{d}\vec \ell} = \phi (\vec b) -\phi(\vec a). \)

From these equations, we see that the electric potential is constant in any region for which the electric field vanishes (such as occurs inside a conducting object).

Electrostatic energy
Main articles: Electric potential energy and Energy density

A single test particle's potential energy, U_\mathrm{E}^{\text{single}}, can be calculated from a line integral of the work, q_n\vec E\cdot\mathrm d\vec\ell . We integrate from a point at infinity, and assume a collection of N particles of charge Q_n, are already situated at the points \vec r_i. This potential energy (in Joules) is:

\( U_\mathrm{E}^{\text{single}}=q\phi(\vec r)=\frac{q }{4\pi \varepsilon_0}\sum_{i=1}^N \frac{Q_i}{\left \|\mathcal{\vec R_i} \right \|} \)

where \( \vec\mathcal {R_i} = \vec r - \vec r_i \) is the distance of each charge Q_i from the test charge q, which situated at the point \vec r , and \phi(\vec r) is the electric potential that would be at \vec r if the test charge were not present. If only two charges are present, the potential energy is \( k_eQ_1Q_2/r \). The total electric potential energy due a collection of N charges is calculating by assembling these particles one at a time:

\( U_\mathrm{E}^{\text{total}} = \frac{1 }{4\pi \varepsilon _0}\sum_{j=1}^N Q_j \sum_{i=1}^{j-1} \frac{Q_i}{r_{ij}}= \frac{1}{2}\sum_{i=1}^N Q_i\phi_i , \)

where the following sum from, j = 1 to N, excludes i = j:

\( \phi_i = \frac{1}{4\pi \varepsilon _0}\sum_{j=1 (j\ne i)}^N \frac{Q_j}{r_{ij}}. \)

This electric potential, \( \phi_i \) is what would be measured at \vec r_i if the charge Q_i were missing. This formula obviously excludes the (infinite) energy that would be required to assemble each point charge from a disperse cloud of charge. The sum over charges can be converted into an integral over charge density using the prescription \( \sum (\cdots) \rightarrow \int(\cdots)\rho\mathrm d^3r \):

\( U_\mathrm{E}^{\text{total}} = \frac{1}{2} \int\rho(\vec{r})\phi(\vec{r}) \operatorname{d}^3 r = \frac{\varepsilon_0 }{2} \int \left|{\mathbf{E}}\right|^2 \operatorname{d}^3 r, \)

This second expression for electrostatic energy uses the fact that the electric field is the negative gradient of the electric potential, as well as vector calculus identities in a way that resembles integration by parts. These two integrals for electric field energy seem to indicate two mutually exclusive formulas for electrostatic energy density, namely \( \frac{1}{2}\rho\phi and \frac{\varepsilon_0 }{2}E^2 \); they yield equal values for the total electrostatic energy only if both are integrated over all space.
Electrostatic pressure

On a conductor, a surface charge will experience a force in the presence of an electric field. This force is the average of the discontinuous electric field at the surface charge. This average in terms of the field just outside the surface amounts to:

\( P = \frac{ \varepsilon_0 }{2} E^2 , \)

This pressure tends to draw the conductor into the field, regardless of the sign of the surface charge.
Triboelectric series
Main article: Triboelectric effect

The triboelectric effect is a type of contact electrification in which certain materials become electrically charged when they are brought into contact with a different material and then separated. One of the materials acquires a positive charge, and the other acquires an equal negative charge. The polarity and strength of the charges produced differ according to the materials, surface roughness, temperature, strain, and other properties. Amber, for example, can acquire an electric charge by friction with a material like wool. This property, first recorded by Thales of Miletus, was the first electrical phenomenon investigated by man. Other examples of materials that can acquire a significant charge when rubbed together include glass rubbed with silk, and hard rubber rubbed with fur.

Electrostatic generators
Main article: Electrostatic generator

The presence of surface charge imbalance means that the objects will exhibit attractive or repulsive forces. This surface charge imbalance, which yields static electricity, can be generated by touching two differing surfaces together and then separating them due to the phenomena of contact electrification and the triboelectric effect. Rubbing two nonconductive objects generates a great amount of static electricity. This is not just the result of friction; two nonconductive surfaces can become charged by just being placed one on top of the other. Since most surfaces have a rough texture, it takes longer to achieve charging through contact than through rubbing. Rubbing objects together increases amount of adhesive contact between the two surfaces. Usually insulators, e.g., substances that do not conduct electricity, are good at both generating, and holding, a surface charge. Some examples of these substances are rubber, plastic, glass, and pith. Conductive objects only rarely generate charge imbalance except, for example, when a metal surface is impacted by solid or liquid nonconductors. The charge that is transferred during contact electrification is stored on the surface of each object. Static electric generators, devices which produce very high voltage at very low current and used for classroom physics demonstrations, rely on this effect.

Note that the presence of electric current does not detract from the electrostatic forces nor from the sparking, from the corona discharge, or other phenomena. Both phenomena can exist simultaneously in the same system.

See also: Friction machines, Wimshurst machines, and Van de Graaff generators.

Charge neutralization

Natural electrostatic phenomena are most familiar as an occasional annoyance in seasons of low humidity, but can be destructive and harmful in some situations (e.g. electronics manufacturing). When working in direct contact with integrated circuit electronics (especially delicate MOSFETs), or in the presence of flammable gas, care must be taken to avoid accumulating and suddenly discharging a static charge (see electrostatic discharge).
Charge induction
Main article: Electrostatic induction

Charge induction occurs when a negatively charged object repels (the negatively charged) electrons from the surface of a second object. This creates a region in the second object that is more positively charged. An attractive force is then exerted between the objects. For example, when a balloon is rubbed, the balloon will stick to the wall as an attractive force is exerted by two oppositely charged surfaces (the surface of the wall gains an electric charge due to charge induction, as the free electrons at the surface of the wall are repelled by the negative balloon, creating a positive wall surface, which is subsequently attracted to the surface of the balloon). You can explore the effect with a simulation of the balloon and static electricity.

'Static' electricity
Main article: Static electricity
Lightning over Oradea in Romania

Before the year 1832, when Michael Faraday published the results of his experiment on the identity of electricities, physicists thought "static electricity" was somehow different from other electrical charges. Michael Faraday proved that the electricity induced from the magnet, voltaic electricity produced by a battery, and static electricity are all the same.

Static electricity is usually caused when certain materials are rubbed against each other, like wool on plastic or the soles of shoes on carpet. The process causes electrons to be pulled from the surface of one material and relocated on the surface of the other material.

A static shock occurs when the surface of the second material, negatively charged with electrons, touches a positively-charged conductor, or vice versa.

Static electricity is commonly used in xerography, air filters, and some automotive paints. Static electricity is a buildup of electric charges on two objects that have become separated from each other. Small electrical components can easily be damaged by static electricity. Component manufacturers use a number of antistatic devices to avoid this.

Static electricity and chemical industry

When different materials are brought together and then separated, an accumulation of electric charge can occur which leaves one material positively charged while the other becomes negatively charged. The mild shock that you receive when touching a grounded object after walking on carpet is an example of excess electrical charge accumulating in your body from frictional charging between your shoes and the carpet. The resulting charge build-up upon your body can generate a strong electrical discharge. Although experimenting with static electricity may be fun, similar sparks create severe hazards in those industries dealing with flammable substances, where a small electrical spark may ignite explosive mixtures with devastating consequences.

A similar charging mechanism can occur within low conductivity fluids flowing through pipelines—a process called flow electrification. Fluids which have low electrical conductivity (below 50 picosiemens per meter), are called accumulators. Fluids having conductivities above 50 pS/m are called non-accumulators. In non-accumulators, charges recombine as fast as they are separated and hence electrostatic charge generation is not significant. In the petrochemical industry, 50 pS/m is the recommended minimum value of electrical conductivity for adequate removal of charge from a fluid.

An important concept for insulating fluids is the static relaxation time. This is similar to the time constant (tau) within an RC circuit. For insulating materials, it is the ratio of the static dielectric constant divided by the electrical conductivity of the material. For hydrocarbon fluids, this is sometimes approximated by dividing the number 18 by the electrical conductivity of the fluid. Thus a fluid that has an electrical conductivity of 1 pS/cm (100 pS/m) will have an estimated relaxation time of about 18 seconds. The excess charge within a fluid will be almost completely dissipated after 4 to 5 times the relaxation time, or 90 seconds for the fluid in the above example.

Charge generation increases at higher fluid velocities and larger pipe diameters, becoming quite significant in pipes 8 inches (200 mm) or larger. Static charge generation in these systems is best controlled by limiting fluid velocity. The British standard BS PD CLC/TR 50404:2003 (formerly BS-5958-Part 2) Code of Practice for Control of Undesirable Static Electricity prescribes velocity limits. Because of its large impact on dielectric constant, the recommended velocity for hydrocarbon fluids containing water should be limited to 1 m/s.

Bonding and earthing are the usual ways by which charge buildup can be prevented. For fluids with electrical conductivity below 10 pS/m, bonding and earthing are not adequate for charge dissipation, and anti-static additives may be required.
Applicable standards

1.BS PD CLC/TR 50404:2003 Code of Practice for Control of Undesirable Static Electricity

2.NFPA 77 (2007) Recommended Practice on Static Electricity

3.API RP 2003 (1998) Protection Against Ignitions Arising Out of Static, Lightning, and Stray Currents
Electrostatic induction in commercial applications

The principle of electrostatic induction has been harnessed to beneficial effect in industry for many years, beginning with the introduction of electrostatic industrial painting systems for the economical and even application of enamel and polyurethane paints to consumer goods, including automobiles, bicycles, and other products.

See also

Electromagnetism
Permittivity and relative permittivity
Ionic bond
Electronegativity
Electrostatic discharge
Electrostatic separator
Electrostatic voltmeter

References

Faraday, Michael (1839). Experimental Researches in Electricity. London: Royal Inst.
e-book at Project Gutenberg
Halliday, David; Robert Resnick; Kenneth S. Krane (1992). Physics. New York: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-80457-6.
Griffiths, David J. (1999). Introduction to Electrodynamics. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-805326-X.
Hermann A. Haus and James R. Melcher (1989). Electromagnetic Fields and Energy. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall. ISBN 0-13-249020-X.

Matthew Sadiku (2009). Elements of electromagnetics. p. 104. ISBN 9780195387759.

Further reading

Essays

William J. Beaty, "Humans and sparks; The Cause, Stopping the Pain, and 'Electric People". 1997.

Books

William Cecil Dampier, "The theory of experimental electricity". Cambridge [Eng.] University press, 1905 (Cambridge physical series). xi, 334 p. illus., diagrs. 23 cm. LCCN 05040419 //r33
William Thomson Kelvin, Reprint of Papers on Electrostatics and Magnetism By William Thomson Kelvin, Macmillan 1872
Alexander MacAulay Utility of Quaternions in Physics. Electrostatics—General Problem. Macmillan 1893
Alexander Russell, A Treatise on the Theory of Alternating Currents. Electrostatics. University Press 1904

External links
Look up electrostatics in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

Man's static jacket sparks alert". BBC News, 16 September 2005.
Static Electricity and Plastics[dead link]
"Can shocks from static electricity damage your health?". Wolfson Electrostatics News pages.
Invisible wall of static:
Downloadable electrostatic BEM modules in MATLAB for simple capacitance problems
Introduction to Electrostatics: Point charges can be treated as a distribution using the Dirac delta function

Physics Encyclopedia

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