electrical conductivity

physics

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Assorted References

  • high-pressure phenomena
    • Three compression mechanisms in crystals.
      In high-pressure phenomena: Effects on electric and magnetic properties

      Nevertheless, electric conductivities of numerous materials at high pressures have been documented. The principal classes of solids—insulators, semiconductors, metals, and superconductors—are distinguished on the basis of electric conductivity and its variation with temperature. Insulators, which include most rock-forming oxides and silicates, have been investigated extensively by…

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  • salinity determination
    • JOIDES Resolution
      In undersea exploration: Water sampling for temperature and salinity

      Since then, shipboard electrical conductivity systems have become widely used. Salinity-Temperature-Depth (STD) and the more recent Conductivity-Temperature-Depth (CTD) systems have greatly improved on-site hydrographic sampling methods. They have enabled oceanographers to learn much about small-scale temperature and salinity distributions.

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  • testing
    • In materials testing: Measurement of electrical properties

      Electrical conductivity involves a flow or current of free electrons through a solid body. Some materials, such as metals, are good conductors of electricity; these possess free or valence electrons that do not remain permanently associated with the atoms of a solid but instead form…

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materials

    • acid-base solutions
      • sodium sulfate
        In acid–base reaction: Hydrogen and hydroxide ions

        …measured, notably by determining the electrical conductivity of the solution (its ability to carry an electrical current), a quantitative measure of the acidity or alkalinity of the solution is provided. Moreover, the equations developed to express the relationships between the various components of reversible reactions can be applied to acid…

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    • ceramics
      • Figure 1: Three common metallic crystal structures.
        In ceramic composition and properties: Nonconductivity

        Ordinarily, ceramics are poor conductors of electricity and therefore make excellent insulators. Nonconductivity arises from the lack of “free” electrons such as those found in metals. In ionically bonded ceramics, bonding electrons are accepted by the electronegative elements, such as oxygen, and donated by the electropositive…

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      • Figure 1: Schematic diagram of a zirconia oxygen sensor used to monitor automobile exhaust gases. The sensor, approximately the size of a spark plug, is fitted into the exhaust manifold of an automobile engine. The thimble-shaped zirconia sensor, sandwiched between thin layers of porous platinum, is exposed on its interior to outside air and on its exterior to exhaust gas passing through slits in the sensor shield. The two platinum surfaces serve as electrodes, conducting a voltage across the zirconia that varies according to the difference in oxygen content between the exhaust gas and the outside air.
        In conductive ceramics

        Some ceramics, however, are excellent conductors of electricity. Most of these conductors are advanced ceramics, modern materials whose properties are modified through precise control over their fabrication from powders into products. The properties and manufacture of advanced ceramics are described in the article advanced ceramics. This article offers a survey…

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    • crystals
      • Figure 1: Unit cells for face-centred and body-centred cubic lattices.
        In crystal: Conduction through ion hopping

        Electrical conductivity σ is the inverse of resistivity and is measured in units of ohm-metre−1. Electrical current is produced by the motion of charges. In crystals, electrical current is due to the motion of both ions and electrons. Ions move by hopping occasionally from site…

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    • ferrites
      • magnetic field from current loop
        In magnetism: Ferrimagnetism

        …ferromagnetic metals, they have low electric conductivity, however. In alternating magnetic fields, this greatly reduces the energy loss resulting from eddy currents. Since these losses rise with the frequency of the alternating field, such substances are of much importance in the electronics industry.

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    • glass
      • Figure 2: The irregular arrangement of ions in a sodium silicate glass.
        In industrial glass: Electrical conductivity

        Although most glasses contain charged metallic ions capable of carrying an electric current, the high viscosity of glass impedes their movements and electrical activity. Thus, glass is an efficient electrical insulator—though this property varies with viscosity, which in turn is a function of…

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    • metallic glass
      • Figure 1: The state of atomic motion.
        In amorphous solid: Properties and applications of amorphous solids

        …a metallic glass causes its electrical conductivity to be lower than the conductivity of the corresponding crystalline metal, because the structural disorder impedes the motion of the mobile electrons that make up the electrical current. (This lower electrical conductivity for the amorphous metal can be an advantage in some situations,…

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    • physical metallurgy
      • Catalan hearth or forge used for smelting iron ore until relatively recent times. The method of charging fuel and ore and the approximate position of the nozzle supplied with air by a bellows are shown.
        In metallurgy: Electrical properties

        The electrical conductivity of a metal (or its reciprocal, electrical resistivity) is determined by the ease of movement of electrons past the atoms under the influence of an electric field. This movement is particularly easy in copper, silver, gold, and aluminum—all of which are well-known conductors…

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    • quasicrystals
      • Figure 1: Hexagonal lattice of atomic sites.
        In quasicrystal: Electric properties

        …which tend to be good electrical conductors, quasicrystals conduct electricity poorly. For alloys of aluminum-copper-ruthenium these conductivities differ by as much as a factor of 100. As the perfection of the quasicrystalline order grows, the conductivity drops. Such behaviour is consistent with the appearance of a gap in the electronic…

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    • rare-earth elements
      • electron probabilities for gadolinium
        In rare-earth element: Sesquioxides

        …a material with a high electrical conductivity. These materials (5–8 percent Y2O3 in ZrO2) are excellent oxygen sensors. They are used to determine the oxygen content in the air and to control the rich-to-lean ratio in automobile fuels.

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    • rocks
      • rock size
        In rock: Electrical properties

        The electrical nature of a material is characterized by its conductivity (or, inversely, its resistivity) and its dielectric constant, and coefficients that indicate the rates of change of these with temperature, frequency at which measurement is made, and so on. For rocks with…

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    • Saturn’s core
      • Saturn
        In Saturn: The interior of Saturn

        The calculated electrical conductivity of Saturn’s outer core of fluid metallic hydrogen is such that if slow circulation currents are present—as would be expected with the flow of heat to the surface accompanied by gravitational settling of denser components—there is sufficient dynamo action to generate the planet’s…

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    • semiconductor materials
      • conductivities
        In semiconductor device: Semiconductor materials

        ) Figure 1 shows the conductivities σ (and the corresponding resistivities ρ = 1/σ) that are associated with some important materials in each of the three classes. Insulators, such as fused quartz and glass, have very low conductivities, on the order of 10−18 to 10−10 siemens per centimetre; and conductors,…

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    • silver
      • In silver processing: The metal and its alloys

        Because silver has the highest electrical conductivity of all metals, it is used in alloyed form for electrical contacts. Palladium and nickel improve the metal’s chemical resistance to oxidation and sulfidation as well as its resistance to corrosion.

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    physical laws and properties

      • mobility
        • In mobility

          …particular type of charged particle moves through a solid material under the influence of an electric field. Such particles are both pulled along by the electric field and periodically collide with atoms of the solid. This combination of electric field and collisions causes the particles to move with an average…

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      • Ohm’s law
        • electric force between two charges
          In electricity: Basic phenomena and principles

          …proportionality constant σJ is the conductivity of the material. In a metallic conductor, the charge carriers are electrons and, under the influence of an external electric field, they acquire some average drift velocity in the direction opposite the field. In conductors of this variety, the drift velocity is limited by…

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      • radiation
        • energy states in molecular systems
          In radiation: Crystal-lattice effects

          …conductivity for both heat and electricity. Conduction of both in metallic crystals is attributable to their ordered structure. The more perfect the structure, the better is the conduction. Frenkel defects, generated by irradiation, therefore decrease both conductivities. In extreme cases conductivity decrease of orders of magnitude has been observed. With…

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      • resistivity
        • In resistivity

          Conductivity is the reciprocal of resistivity, and it, too, characterizes materials on the basis of how well electric current flows in them. The metre-kilogram-second unit of conductivity is mho per metre, or ampere per volt-metre. Good electrical conductors have high conductivities and low resistivities. Good…

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