Change of relative permittivity of liquid and solid water

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the relative permittivity of liquid water and solid water (ice), exploring the implications of their differing values on polarizability. Participants examine the measurement of permittivity, the relationship between polarization and electric fields, and the effects of frequency on these measurements.

Discussion Character

  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants propose that ice is around 20 times less polarizable than liquid water based on their relative permittivity values.
  • Questions arise regarding how to measure "polarizableness" and the significance of permittivity values in different contexts.
  • There is a discussion about the distinction between free space and vacuum, with some participants asserting that "free space" is a clearer term in classical electromagnetism.
  • One participant suggests that the relative permittivity values may need to be measured at the same frequency, noting that the value for water is typically measured in static fields while ice may be measured at higher frequencies.
  • Concerns are raised about whether it is valid to compare the polarizability of materials with respect to a vacuum, given that a vacuum is not polarizable.
  • Participants discuss the feasibility of measuring the dielectric constant of ice by inserting it between electrodes and applying a potential, questioning the implications of the resulting measurements.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the interpretation of relative permittivity values and their implications for polarizability. There is no consensus on how to measure or interpret these values, and the discussion remains unresolved regarding the effects of frequency on permittivity measurements.

Contextual Notes

Participants highlight the importance of frequency in permittivity measurements and the potential ambiguity in comparing polarizability across different materials and conditions.

mzh
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Dear Physics Forum Users
Commonly, the relative permittivity of liquid water is reported to be \epsilon_r = 78.0\epsilon_0, \epsilon_0 being the dielectric constant of the vacuum.
For ice (solid water), \epsilon_r = 4 \epsilon_0 (heard it in a talk once).

Is it correct to interpret the different values in this way that ice is around 20 times less polarizable than liquid water? Which intuitively would make sense.

Thanks for comments.
 
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Is it correct to interpret the different values in this way that ice is around 20 times less polarizable than liquid water?
How would you measure "polarizableness"?

\epsilon_0 would be the permittivity of free space - "the dielectric constant of the vacuum" would be 1. This is important in relation to above since you may want to consider a substance more polarizable in proportion to the magnitude of the polarization density for a given applied electric field ... the polarization density of a vacuum is zero.
 
Simon Bridge said:
How would you measure "polarizableness"?

\epsilon_0 would be the permittivity of free space - "the dielectric constant of the vacuum" would be 1. This is important in relation to above since you may want to consider a substance more polarizable in proportion to the magnitude of the polarization density for a given applied electric field ... the polarization density of a vacuum is zero.

Thanks for your comment, however I don't understand it:
What is the difference between free space and vacuum formally?

Do you agree to the statement that polarization arises from the response of a polarizable material to an electric field, i.e. the dipole moments of the material (built-in or induced) align with the field which creates a new, opposing field, which partially cancels the applied field within the material, albeit not completely (except for within metals).

How then are the different relative permittivities \epsilon_r = 4.0 for ice and \epsilon_r = 78 for water to be interpreted?
 
mzh said:
Is it correct to interpret the different values in this way that ice is around 20 times less polarizable than liquid water? Which intuitively would make sense.

Thanks for comments.

Before you do this you should make sure that the two values are measured at the same frequency. For your case, I suspect that they are not.
The value of about 80 is the relative permittivity of water in DC or static fields. It decreases significantly at high frequencies.
The value of about 4 (for ice) may be the one measured in the microwave range, like in this paper (for example):
http://eis.bris.ac.uk/~glhmm/pdfs/WestJEEG07.pdf
 
Thanks for your comment, however I don't understand it:
What is the difference between free space and vacuum formally?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vacuum

"free space" is less ambiguous.
In classical electromagnetism, "the vacuum of free space" is distinct from just any old vacuum.

However that wasn't the distinction I was going for.
Do you agree to the statement that polarization arises from the response of a polarizable material to an electric field
Yes.

Consider:
If I have a material with relative permittivity 20, does it make sense to say that this material is 20x more polarizable than a vacuum (relative permittivity of 1)?
 
Last edited:
Simon Bridge said:
Consider:
If I have a material with relative permittivity 20, does it make sense to say that this material is 20x more polarizable than a vacuum (relative permittivity of 1)?

you're saying it does not make sense, because the vacuum is not polarizable..

why do i need to measure the dielectric constant of ice depending on frequency? can I not just insert a block of ice between two electrodes and apply a potential to one side?

From C = \epsilon_r \epsilon_0 \frac{A}{d} and C=Q/U, can I not get \epsilon_r, simply once I know U and Q?

Given such an experiment, I place a piece of ice and a volume of water in the capacitor and measure the relative constant of dielectricity for both, classically, what do the two different values tell me about the material?
 

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