Charge Relaxation in Metals: Explained

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Charge relaxation in metals involves the exponential decay of free charge density over time, as derived from Ampere-Maxwell's law and Gauss's law. Polarization charges induced by an external electric field do not decay while the field is present, but free charges migrate to the surface of the metal, leading to zero electric field within the conductor. Once equilibrium is reached, all excess free charges reside on the surface, resulting in no charge remaining inside the metal. The discussion clarifies that the charge density referenced in the context of relaxation specifically pertains to free charges. Understanding this concept is crucial for applying the principles outlined in Born and Wolf's Principles of Optics.
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I have been using Born and Wolf's Principles of Optics for a project but I don't quite understand the concept of charge relaxation in metals (eq.6, P736 of 7th ed). The author used Ampere-Maxwell's law and Gauss's law to derive a differential equation involving the time differentiation of charge density and the charge density is found to fall off exponentially with time.

I don't quite understand whether this charge density refers to the charges due to polarization, or they really exponentially decay even if the metallic body carries free charges.
 
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mahinda said:
I have been using Born and Wolf's Principles of Optics for a project but I don't quite understand the concept of charge relaxation in metals (eq.6, P736 of 7th ed). The author used Ampere-Maxwell's law and Gauss's law to derive a differential equation involving the time differentiation of charge density and the charge density is found to fall off exponentially with time.

I don't quite understand whether this charge density refers to the charges due to polarization, or they really exponentially decay even if the metallic body carries free charges.

If I understand your question correctly (I don't have a copy of the reference) polarization charges are induced by an external electric field and they don't decay as long as the external field is present. Free charges within a metal decay exponentially in the process of migrating to the metal's surface. Once equilibrium has been attained, all of the excess free charge will reside on the metal object's surface. It arranges itself on the surface so that the electric field at all internal points is zero.
 
Hi, thank you very much! I think I agree with you that the charge density here refers to the free charge. The author's point of mentioning the charge relaxation is that in metals Gauss's law can be considered as divergence of electric field equals zero, since any charge would exponentially decay. I'm not quite sure whether this is because the charges all migrate to the surface so that no charge exists inside the metal.
 
The charge density referred to is free charge. A free charge distribution placed inside a conductor will decrease exponentially in magnitude, while retaining its shape until all the charge is distributed on the surface so that E will be zero inside the conductor.
There will be no charge left inside the conductor at that point.
 
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