Everything about Electrophorus totally explained
» For the genus of fish family Electrophoridae
, see electric eel.
An
electrophorus is a
capacitive generator used to produce
electrostatic charge via the process of
electrostatic induction. It was invented in 1764 by Swedish professor
Johan Carl Wilcke,
but Italian scientist
Alessandro Volta improved and popularized the device in 1775, and is sometimes erroneously credited with its invention.
The word
electrophorus was coined by Volta from the Greek ηλεκτρόν ('elektron'), ϕορεω ('phoro'), meaning 'electricity bearer'.
The electrophorus consists of a
dielectric plate (originally a 'cake' of resinous material like pitch or wax, but in modern versions plastic is used) and a metal plate with an insulating handle. First, the dielectric plate is charged through the
triboelectric effect by rubbing it with fur or cloth. Then, the metal plate is placed onto the dielectric plate. The
electrostatic field of the dielectric causes the charges in the metal plate to separate. The metal develops two regions of charge — the side facing the charged dielectric plate charges opposite to the charge of plate, while the side facing away from the dielectric charge attains the same sign of charge as the dielectric plate, with the metal plate remaining electrically neutral as a whole. Then, the side facing away from the dielectric plate is momentarily grounded (which can be done by touching it with a finger), draining off the alike charge. Finally, the metal plate, now carrying only one sign of charge, is lifted.
Where does the charge come from?
It is sometimes asked, how can an unlimited amount of charge be gotten from the limited initial charge on the device? The answer is that the charge on the dielectric isn't consumed in the process. Its role is just to induce charge in the plate. Although the plate is set on the dielectric, it only makes contact with the surface in a few places, and little or no charge is transferred since charge can't move through the dielectric; in fact the electrophorus can function without the two parts touching.
The energy to accumulate each charge comes from the
work done in lifting the charged plate away from the dielectric surface, against the
electrostatic force between them.
The electrophorus is actually a manually operated electrostatic
generator, using the same
induction principle as
electrostatic machines such as the
Wimshurst machine and the
Van de Graaf generator.
[Further Information]
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