zach88 said:
Thanks for the explanation. Now, for my next question. From the quote, it said that the tines of the fork respond to the electric field by producing high concentrations of electric charge at the tips which has the effect of exceeding the dielectric breakdown of air. Can you explain what is it means by dielectric breakdown?
Hi Zach,
I will assume from that, that you don't know what a dielectric is. There are some pretty complex explanations online some googling will lead you through some of them :)
but for the ease of explanation, let's view a dielectric as a type of insulator. There are many variations ... eg. air, paper, plastic, mica, foam, teflon ... all used in day to day electronics.
Air, paper, plastic, mica all often used in capacitors as an insulator between the 2 plates of a capacitor. Air, foam and teflon are often used in coax cable as an insulator between the inner conductor and outer conductor of the coax cable.
All the different dielectrics mentioned above ( and others I havent) have an ability, for a given thickness to withstand an electric field across it without breaking down --
This is called the
Dielectric Strength -- of an insulating material.
Different materials have different strengths. Dry air is used in very hi voltage capacitors, and coax cables as 2 examples. In the old days, valve radio etc era, paper was commonly used in capacitors and the paper was impregnated with wax to help improve its dielectric properties. These days you will normally only find paper in electrolytic capacitors ( the ones in metal cans)
In a coax cable the type of dielectric used has 2 major effects on the makeup of the cable.
1) it affects its dielectric strength abilities --- foam worse, air very good, teflon the best
2) it also affects the velocity factor of the cable -- teflon worse, foam very good, air the best
we won't go into coax velocity factors here ---- that's for another whole topic. ;)
Now hopefully you have a handle on that :)
a fork in the microwave with its individual prongs (tines). A large electric field builds up on each prong due to the intense RF EM field present. You have an air dielectric between each prong. That air gap has a dielectric strength that will finally be overcome in a strong enough electric field that you get a flashover (spark) between the prongs.
have a look at this wiki page for a list of materials and their relative dielectric strength
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dielectric_strength
Air is very low on the list compared to waxed paper, teflon and mica
cheers
Dave