Why does a charged Styrofoam plate attract paper but repel aluminum foil?

AI Thread Summary
A charged Styrofoam plate attracts paper but repels aluminum foil due to their differing electrical properties. The aluminum foil, being conductive, allows electrons to move, leading to a repulsion after initial attraction when it becomes negatively charged. In contrast, paper is an insulator; its electrons remain bound, causing polarization without movement, resulting in attraction to the charged plate. The interaction is influenced by the electric field generated by the Styrofoam, which polarizes the paper molecules. Overall, the conductive nature of aluminum foil leads to repulsion, while the insulating properties of paper allow for attraction.
cvc121
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Homework Statement


Based on a lab we did at school, we charged a Styrofoam plate by rubbing it against wool and determined that it attracted pieces of paper but repelled pieces of aluminum foil. Can anyone clarify why this is because I believe that both the pieces of paper and aluminum foil are neutral so wouldn't they both attract?

Homework Equations


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The Attempt at a Solution


My only reasonable explanation is that the aluminum foil is conductive and picks up the electrons from the negatively charged Styrofoam plate and repel while the pieces of paper which act as an insulator attract to the plate. All help is very much appreciated!
 
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cvc121 said:

Homework Statement


Based on a lab we did at school, we charged a Styrofoam plate by rubbing it against wool and determined that it attracted pieces of paper but repelled pieces of aluminum foil. Can anyone clarify why this is because I believe that both the pieces of paper and aluminum foil are neutral so wouldn't they both attract?

Homework Equations


N/A

The Attempt at a Solution


My only reasonable explanation is that the aluminum foil is conductive and picks up the electrons from the negatively charged Styrofoam plate and repel while the pieces of paper which act as an insulator attract to the plate. All help is very much appreciated!
You are on the right track. The charge can not move in the paper pieces, it stays polarized by the Styrofoam, but neutral, while the aluminium foil gets charged as it is in contact with the Styrofoam for a very short time,
 
cvc121 said:
and determined that it attracted pieces of paper but repelled pieces of aluminum foil.
Was the foil seen to be first attracted to the plastic plate?
 
You are very much right cvc.
Intitally they are both attrackted, but upon contact the foil gets charged up and then repelled.
Why would the paper react differently?
Why are they both intially attracted?
Note that sometimes even the paper is repelled after a while. So these conditions or outcomes are not always the same for pieces of paper, but the foil will always act in the way descirbed. Any idea why?
Keep in mind that the styrofoam is also a nonconductive material.
 
Thanks for the replies everyone! Am I on the right track in saying that the negatively charged Styrofoam plate repels the free electrons on the surface of the neutral pieces of paper that is nearest, moving them to other parts of the object. Hence, this leaves a new positive charge on the side facing the negatively charged Styrofoam plate, and the two unlikes attract.
 
cvc121 said:
Am I on the right track in saying that the negatively charged Styrofoam plate repels the free electrons on the surface of the neutral pieces of paper that is nearest, moving them to other parts of the object.
The paper is not a conductor, it has no free electrons. Its electrons are bound to the molecules, they can not leave their molecules and moving to other parts of the paper.
 
Ok. So how else are the paper pieces able to attract the negatively charged Styrofoam plate since no movement of electrons take place?
 
The molecules in the paper are polarized by the electric field generated by the charged styrofoam plate.
 
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