In electrostatics, materials can be broadly classified into conductors and insulators. Conductors allow free movement of electric charges, whereas insulators (also called dielectrics) do not.

Dielectrics play a crucial role in capacitors, electronic circuits, and various electrical devices because they can store and influence electric fields without conducting electricity.
The study of dielectrics and their polarisation is essential to understand how insulating materials behave in an electric field and how they affect capacitance and energy storage.
What is a Dielectric?
A dielectric is a non-conducting substance that can be polarised by an electric field. Unlike conductors, dielectrics do not have free electrons; instead, their electrons are bound to atoms or molecules.
Examples:
Solid dielectrics: Glass, mica, ceramic, plastic.
Liquid dielectrics: Distilled water, transformer oil.
Gaseous dielectrics: Air, nitrogen.


Polarisation in Dielectrics
When a dielectric is placed in an external electric field E, the positive and negative charges inside its atoms or molecules experience equal and opposite forces. This leads to a small displacement of charge centers, creating electric dipoles. This process is called polarisation.
Definition:
Polarisation is the process of alignment or orientation of the dipole moments of molecules in a dielectric material under the influence of an external electric field.
Dipole Moment and Polarisation Vector
Dipole Moment (p): For a dipole with charges +q and -q separated by distance 2a, p = q x 2a
Direction: From negative to positive charge.
Polarisation Vector (P): The dipole moment per unit volume of the dielectric.
P = Net dipole moment / Volume
Units: C·m-2 (Coulomb meter per square meter).
Types of Polarization
There are mainly three types
(a) Electronic Polarisation
Occurs in all dielectrics.
The external electric field displaces the electron cloud of an atom slightly relative to its nucleus.
Induced dipole moment is proportional to the electric field:
p = αeE Where αe is the electronic polarisability.
(b) Ionic Polarisation
Found in ionic solids like NaCl.
In an electric field, cations and anions shift slightly in opposite directions, creating dipoles.
More significant than electronic polarisation in ionic compounds.
(c) Orientational Polarisation
Found in polar molecules (e.g., H2O, HCl) which already have a permanent dipole moment.
In the absence of a field, these dipoles are randomly oriented due to thermal motion.
An electric field tends to align them partially along its direction.
Effect of Dielectrics on Electric Field
When a dielectric is inserted between the plates of a capacitor:
The electric field inside is reduced due to the polarisation charges induced on the dielectric surfaces.
The reduction factor is expressed by the dielectric constant (relative permittivity) K: E = E0 / K
Where E0 is the electric field without the dielectric.
Dielectric Constant (Relative Permittivity)
The dielectric constant K is the ratio of the capacitance with dielectric C to the capacitance without dielectric C0:
K = C / C0 It is also given by: K = € / €0
Where:
€ = permittivity of dielectric.
€0= permittivity of free space (8.854 10-12 C²·N-1 m-2).
A higher K means better ability to reduce the electric field and increase capacitance.
Relation between Polarisation and Electric Field
The polarisation P in a linear dielectric is proportional to the applied electric field: P = €0XeE
Where Xe is the electric susceptibility of the dielectric.
Bound Charges
Due to polarisation, bound charges appear:
Surface bound charge density:
ᵟb(sigma) = P . ή
Where ή is the unit normal vector to the surface.
Volume bound charge density: pb = -▼. P
These bound charges produce an electric field opposing the applied field.
Importance and Applications
Capacitors: Insertion of a dielectric increases capacitance, allowing more energy storage for the same voltage.
Electrical insulation: Dielectrics prevent unwanted current flow in high-voltage equipment.
Energy storage: Used in batteries and energy storage devices.
Electronic devices: Essential in transistors, ICs, and communication systems.
Microwave and RF applications: Certain dielectrics are used as substrates for antennas and circuits.

Summary Table
Property | Symbol | Unit | Significance |
Permittivity | €0 | C2 . N-1. m-2 | Measures ability to permit electric field lines |
Dielectric Constant | K | Dimensionless | Relative measure compared to vacuum |
Polarization | P | C . m-2 | Dipole moment per unit volume |
Electric Susceptibility | Xe | Dimensionless | Proportionality constant in P = €0XeE |