Effective cluster model of dielectric enhancement in metal-insulator composites

W. T. Doyle and I. S. Jacobs
Phys. Rev. B 42, 9319 – Published 15 November 1990
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Abstract

The electrical permittivity of a suspension of conducting spheres at high volume loading exhibits a large enhancement above the value predicted by the Clausius-Mossotti approximation. The permittivity enhancement is a dielectric anomaly accompanying a metallization transition that occurs when conducting particles are close packed. In disordered suspensions, close encounters can cause a permittivity enhancement at any volume loading. We attribute the permittivity enhancements typically observed in monodisperse disordered suspensions of conducting spheres to local metallized regions of high density produced by density fluctuations. We model a disordered suspension as a mixture, or mesosuspension, of isolated spheres and random close-packed spherical clusters of arbitrary size. Multipole interactions within the clusters are treated exactly. External interactions between clusters and isolated spheres are treated in the dipole approximation. Model permittivities are compared with Guillien’s experimental permittivity measurements [Ann. Phys. (Paris) Ser. 11, 16, 205 (1941)] on liquid suspensions of Hg droplets in oil and with Turner’s conductivity measurements [Chem. Eng. Sci. 31, 487 (1976)] on fluidized bed suspensions of ion-exchange resin beads in aqueous solution. New permittivity measurements at 10 GHz on solid suspensions of monodisperse metal spheres in polyurethane are presented and compared with the model permittivities. The effective spherical cluster model is in excellent agreement with the experiments over the entire accessible range of volume loading.

  • Received 25 June 1990

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.42.9319

©1990 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

W. T. Doyle

  • Physics Department, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755

I. S. Jacobs

  • GE Corporate Research and Development, P.O. Box 8, Schenectady, New York 12301

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Vol. 42, Iss. 15 — 15 November 1990

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