ANOMALOUS PIEZOELECTRIC EFFECTS, FOUND IN THE LABORATORY AND RECONSTRUCTED BY NUMERICAL SIMULATION

Anomalous piezoelectric effects, found in the laboratory and reconstructed by numerical simulation

Anomalous piezoelectric effects, found in the laboratory and reconstructed by numerical simulation

Blog Article

Various rocks and Me Spring Top minerals, which are not piezoelectric in the common sense, exhibit transient electric polarization in response to sudden changes in stress load.This anomalous piezoelectric effect differs from the regular, static piezoelectric response, in which electric charges appear as a result of crystal lattice deformation.The anomalous piezoelectricity is dynamic decaying in a few seconds or a few tens of seconds.

However, in some materials different polarization properties are discovered.To explain certain aspects of the polarization signal increase and decay, some complicated mechanisms of electric charge generation and relaxation need to be assumed in their number ? concurrence of two or three relaxation processes.The hypothetical mechanisms are only mentioned, as the purpose of this work is to construct numerical Shoe Socks models, behaving like the rocks investigated.

Examples of experimental plots are shown together with the results of the numerical simulation of these experiments.

Report this page