What is the physical explanation and results for a negative dielectric constant?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers around the concept of negative dielectric constants, particularly in relation to materials known as metamaterials and their physical implications. Participants explore the conditions under which a negative dielectric constant occurs, its relation to frequency and plasma frequency, and the significance of both real and imaginary parts of the dielectric function.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants suggest that negative dielectric constants are associated with metamaterials, which are constructed using components like split-ring resonators in regions of high dispersion.
  • One participant recalls that a negative refractive index can occur when the frequency of incident electromagnetic waves exceeds the plasma frequency of electrons in the material.
  • Another participant notes that the imaginary part of the dielectric function is typically positive for normal materials at positive frequencies, while the real part can be negative under certain conditions, such as with boron nitride at specific frequencies.
  • There is a question about whether the change in the dielectric constant is continuous or if there is a distinct transition point, similar to superconductivity.
  • Participants discuss the importance of both the real and imaginary parts of the dielectric function, with the imaginary part being relevant for absorption characteristics.
  • Clarifications are made regarding the conditions under which the dielectric function can be negative, emphasizing that it is frequency-dependent and not universally negative.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express various viewpoints on the conditions for negative dielectric constants and the implications of frequency on the dielectric function. There is no consensus on a definitive explanation or agreement on all points raised, indicating ongoing debate and exploration of the topic.

Contextual Notes

Some discussions involve assumptions about the behavior of dielectric constants in relation to frequency and plasma frequency, which may not be universally applicable across all materials. The nuances of the dielectric function's behavior in different contexts remain unresolved.

TheDestroyer
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Hi Guys,

I was reading about plasmons on wikipedia and I found that there are some materials with negative dielectric constant, what I know is that there are complex dielectric and reflection coefficient constants due to reflection in metals, can we relate the the complex dielectric constants to negative dielectric constants?

and what is the physical explanation and results for having negative dielectric constant?

Thanks for reading :smile:
 
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Usually negative refractive index materials are called "metamaterials" because of the way they are constructed. I don't know the details, but the components (split-ring resonators, etc) are used in a region where the dispersion is very high and very negative, near an absorption peak. A consequence of this is that the absorption is usually high for these devices.
 
Thanks Andy Resnick,

Anybody else can explain more?
 
Hi,

I don't speak with any authority and can't give you a definite answer, but I seem to remember that you can obtain a negative refractive index when the frequency of the incident EM wave is greater then the plasma frequency of the electrons in that material. I think they use this to focus X-rays and other high energy waves. Might be worth having a quick look into, although its been a while since I've done this so could be miles off.

Regards
 
Thanks Barny,

Also I'm waiting for more explanations :smile:
 
First of all, for any normal material the imaginary part of the dielectric function is always positive for positive frequencies of radiaiton (the zeros of the dielectric function are actually in the lower half complex plane).

There are many cases (for regular everyday materials) when the real part of the dielectric function is negative. For example, the real part of the dielectric function of boron nitride is negative for incoming frequencies near 2 (eV/hbar). This is pretty typical.

Also, it is interesting to consider when the real part of the dielectric function is less than one. This occurs for all types of materials when the incoming frequency is much greater than the plasma frequency. In this regime the dielectric function is roughly given by
<br /> 1-\frac{\omega_{\rm plasma}^2}{\omega^2}<br />
 
Well olgranpappy, Do you mean that the dielectric constant is a function of frequency, and if the frequency of a metal is greater than plasma frequency then the real part will become negative?

i.e. We care only about the real part, Is this true? and if the preceeding discussion was true, can you explain me to the way that change occurs? i mean is this change continuous? or got a breakoff point like the properties of super-conductivity before reaching it?

Thanks :smile:
 
I mean the dielectric constant is a function of the frequency of the incident radiation. You shine light of some frequency on a material and the material responds. The response is determined by the dielectric function and the dielectric function's value is different for difference incident frequencies.

No, we don't only care about real part. the imaginary part is important because it determines, for example, absorption.
 
TheDestroyer said:
Well olgranpappy, Do you mean that the dielectric constant is a function of frequency, and if the frequency of a metal is greater than plasma frequency then the real part will become negative?

I said that if the frequency of the incident radiation is much higher than the plasma frequency of the metal then the dielectric function is less than one, not negative tho. I said that the dielectric function *can* be negative but only over certain specific regions of frequency.
 
  • #10
Thanks again :smile:
 
  • #11
thankyou...the information seems very useful
 

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