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Encyclopedia > Nonconductors

Nonconductors or electrical insulators are materials which lack movable electric charges, and which therefore lack a low-resistance path for charge flow. When a difference in electrical potential is placed across a nonconductor, no free charges are exposed to the electric field, so no flow of charges appears, and an electric current cannot arise. Ideally, a nonconductor has a resistance of infinity Ohms and a conductance of zero Seimens (Mhos).

Contents

Uses

Nonconductors are commonly used as a flexible coating on electric wire and cable. Since air is a nonconductor, no other substance is needed to "keep the electricity within the wires." However, wires which touch each other will produce cross connections, short circuits, and fire hazards. In coaxial cable the center conductor must be supported exactly in the middle of the hollow shield in order to prevent EM wave reflections. And any wires which present voltages higher than 60V can cause human shock and electrocution hazards. Nonconductive coatings prevent all of these problems.


In electronic systems, printed circuit boards are made from epoxy plastic and fiberglass. The nonconductive boards support layers of copper foil conductors. In electronic devices, the tiny and delicate active components are embedded within nonconductive epoxy or phenolic plastics, or within baked glass or ceramic coatings.


In microelectronic components such as transistors and ICs, the silicon material is normally a conductor because of doping, but it can easily be selectively transformed into a good insulator by the application of heat and oxygen. Oxidized silicon is quartz, i.e. silicon dioxide.


In high voltage systems containing transformers and capacitors, liquid nonconductor oil is the typical method used for preventing sparks. The oil replaces the air in any spaces which must support significant voltage without electrical breakdown.


Examples of nonconductor material

Breakdown

Nonconductors suffer from the phenomenon of electrical breakdown. When any voltage applied across a length nonconductor exceeds a threshold breakdown field for that substance, the nonconductor suddenly turns into a resistor, sometimes with catastrophic results. During electrical breakdown, any free charge carrier being accelerated by the strong e-field will have enough velocity to knock electrons from (ionize) any atom it strikes. These freed electrons and ions are in turn accelerated. One carrier creates two, which create four, etc. Rapidly the nonconductor becomes filled with mobile carriers, and its resistance drops to a low level. In air, the outbreak of conductivity is called "corona discharge" or a "spark." Similar breakdown can occur within any nonconductor, even within the bulk solid of a material. Even a vacuum can break down, but in this case the breakdown or vacuum arc involves the surface of metal electrodes rather than the vacuum itself.


See also

Capacitor dielectric Insulator Resistance Conductivity


  Results from FactBites:
 
U.S. Patent: 5667662 - Electroplating process and composition - September 16, 1997 (4411 words)
The method of claim 1 where the nonconductor is a copper clad printed circuit board substrate having through-holes extending from one of its surfaces to the other of its surfaces.
This invention relates to electroplating nonconductors, and more particularly, to processes and compositions for electroplating the surface of a nonconductor using a stabilized preformed dispersion of a conductive polymer that functions as a base for direct electroplating when adsorbed onto a nonconducting surface.
Nonconducting surfaces are conventionally metallized by a sequence of steps comprising catalysis of the surface of the nonconductor to render the same catalytic to electroless metal deposition followed by contact of said catalyzed surface with a plating solution that deposits metal over the catalyzed surface in the absence of an external source of electricity.
NodeWorks - Encyclopedia: Nonconductor (446 words)
Nonconductors or electrical insulators are materials which lack movable electric charges, and which therefore lack a low-resistance path for charge flow.
When a difference in electrical potential is placed across a nonconductor, no free charges are exposed to the electric field, so no flow of charges appears, and an electric current cannot arise.
Nonconductors are commonly used as a flexible coating on electric wire and cable.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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