There are several things which interfere with our understanding of "Static
Electricity." Most demonstrations incorrectly focus on friction. Also,
the nature of matter and the fundamental reasons for charge conservation
are usually ignored. And the materials used in demonstrations (silk, fur)
are hard to obtain and have a finicky dependence on humidity. The
following demonstrations are my attempt to fix these problems.
Get a spool of plastic tape. Pull a couple of
long strips from the roll, about 20cm each. Hold them up by their ends so
they hang downwards, then slowly bring them side by side. Notice that
they repel each other? If you try to force the dangling lengths of tape
to touch together, they'll swerve and gyrate to frustrate your efforts.
You can stick the strips to a door jamb and on a dry day they will keep
repelling each other for several minutes. They will also "attack" anyone
who passes through the door. Obviously the tape has become electrically
charged. But how? After all, no friction was involved. Something odd is
going on.
These demonstrations won't work when the relative humidity is high. Try the first one above. If the lengths of tape don't repel each other, then the humidity in the room is probably too high, and none of the other demonstrations will work either. Move yourself into an air-conditioned building, then try again!Also, 3M SCOTCH Magic(tm) brand tape doesn't work as well as similar tape from other companies. Perhaps 3M puts "anti-static" chemicals in the adhesive?
Next, pass the entire length of each of the hanging strips lightly
between two fingers several times, then hold the two strips near each
other again. This time they won't repel each other. You've managed to
discharge them by fondling them, and the strips are now nearly neutral.
(If your fingers are extremely dry, this might not work. Wet your fingers
very slightly, but don't get the tape wet.)
Next, fold over a couple of cm of the top of the strips. This gives
you a non-sticky tab on each strip. (It makes it easy to get the strips
apart again in the next part.) Now carefully stick the two strips
together so the sticky side of one strip adheres to the "dry" side of the
other. To show that friction plays no part in the following, try to avoid
rubbing the tape. You should end up with a double-thick layer of tape
which is sticky on one side and has two tabs at one end. Grasp those tabs
and rapidly pull the strips apart. Hold them distantly separated, then
slowly bring them together. You'll find that this time they attract each
other quite strongly. Before they repelled. Now they attract.
Next, do the same thing as above, but twice: take four pieces of tape
and prepare two *pairs* of tape, each pair having one piece stuck to the
back of the other as before. Pull both pairs apart, and either ask a
friend for help, or stick a couple of the tapes to the edge of a table so
they hang down. As before, you'll find that the lengths of tape which
were stuck together now attract each other. But try holding a strip from
one pair near each strip of the other pair. You'll find that your single
strip will attract one of the other strips, but repel the other. When you
peeled each pair apart, one the strips took on opposite charge polarities.
The "sticky" strip now repels the other "sticky" strip, but it attracts
the "dry" strip. When you have four strips, you can demonstrate that
opposite charges attract, but also that alike charges repel.
In explaining everyday electrostatic phenomena, most authors wrongly
emphasize the need to rub materials together to generate separations of
charge. They often directly state that the friction CREATES the charge
separation. This is misleading, since friction really only plays a
secondary role in the process. The physics behind "static"
electrification usually doesn't involve friction, it involves chemistry.
When the surfaces of two everyday objects are touched together, they
always adhere slightly. Chemical bonds form between the atoms which make
up the adjacent surfaces, and this causes the adhesion. If the surfaces
are not composed of the same sorts of material, then chances are the
chemical bonds will be polar, and the bonding electrons will stay with the
atoms of one surface more than with the other. The surfaces become
oppositely electrified when they touch, because one surface immediately
steals electrons from the other as the chemical bonds form. One surface
ends up with more negative electrons than positive protons, and then has
an overall negative charge. The other surface has fewer electrons than
protons, so it has overall positive charge.
Touch two dissimilar surfaces together and the pos/neg
charges in their surfaces become separated. When you pull the surfaces
apart again, the chemical
bonds rupture, and one surface may end up with more electrons that it
started with. The other surface has protons which now lack their nearby
cancelling electrons. Oppositely charged particles which had once been
adjacent to each other and "cancelled out" within the atoms have now been
sorted out and separated by a great distance.
So everyday "static electricity" has little to do with rubbing or
friction. Instead it involves contact, chemistry, and imbalances in the
electrical charges of which matter is made. Electrostatic attraction and
repulsion between electrified objects is a feeble residue of the same
immense forces which hold solid matter together. Our bodies are held
together by "static electricity!" And when a huge crane lifts a steel
beam, the immense force within the steel cable is actually an
electrostatic force field between the atoms of the cable.
If the surfaces involved in contact electrification are rough or
fiberous, then only a tiny part of the surfaces can be touched together at
a time. If a balloon is touched against hair, the hair only touches the
rubber in tiny spots. The "footprint" of contact area will be a tiny
percentage of the total surface. In a situation like this, friction does
play a role. If the balloon is DRAGGED across the hair, then the
successive areas of contact add up to a much larger percentage. Rubbing a
balloon on your head increases the total area of rubber and hair that's
being touched, so it also increases the total amount of separated charges.
Friction aids the charging effect, but friction does not create it.
If you can find a big piece of acrylic from a hardware store, try
laying several pieces of tape on it to form your initials or to form a
simple word. (Always fold little tabs at one end of each strip.) When
you peel all the strips of tape and make a dust cloud, you should then be
rewarded with a clear example of electric-charge writing.
Another demo: get some wide packaging tape, a marker, and a paperclip
(as well as talcum powder, etc.) Stick the tape to the plastic, and
unbend the paperclip to give you a sharp pointed tool. Use the marker to
outline the tape (and where the charged area will be.) Peel the tape from
the plastic, then lightly draw a large invisible "X" on the invisible
charged area on the plastic. Flap the talcum-cloth, and you'll find that
the dust cloud is attracted to the charged area as usual, but the "X" will
be visible as a dust-free zone. The sharp point of the paperclip wire
acted to discharge the plastic. Actually, a tiny corona discharge or "St.
Elmo's Fire" was generated on the sharp wire point. Alike-charged air
spewed out of the corona, and the opposite-charge air settled onto the
plastic, cancelling out the surface charge. With skill (and a big piece
of plastic,) you should be able to write several words on a long
tape-charged area. Hint: paint one side of the plastic black for
contrast. Another hint: try charging the plastic by rubbing it with fur
or wool cloth, then write big invisible letters with the paperclip end.
Clouds of talcum dust should make it visible.
In a copier, the talcum powder is replaced by black "toner" powder.
The plastic plate is replaced by a light-sensitive coating on a metal
drum, which discharges bits of itself wherever light lands on it. The
charging device is a long thin wire with high-voltage corona on it that
sweeps over the drum. The flapping cloth is replaced by a fuzzy brush
made of iron filings stuck to a long magnet, and covered with black toner
powder. And finally, the black powder melts when heated, so a red-hot
"fuser" bar passes over the black dusty paper and makes the writing
permanent.
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