Effective medium model
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In materials science, effective medium approximations (EMA) or effective medium theory (EMT) pertain to analytical or
theoretical A theory is a rational type of abstract thinking about a phenomenon, or the results of such thinking. The process of contemplative and rational thinking is often associated with such processes as observational study or research. Theories may be ...
modeling that describes the
macroscopic The macroscopic scale is the length scale on which objects or phenomena are large enough to be visible with the naked eye, without magnifying optical instruments. It is the opposite of microscopic. Overview When applied to physical phenomena a ...
properties of
composite material A composite material (also called a composition material or shortened to composite, which is the common name) is a material which is produced from two or more constituent materials. These constituent materials have notably dissimilar chemical or ...
s. EMAs or EMTs are developed from
averaging In ordinary language, an average is a single number taken as representative of a list of numbers, usually the sum of the numbers divided by how many numbers are in the list (the arithmetic mean). For example, the average of the numbers 2, 3, 4, 7, ...
the multiple values of the constituents that directly make up the composite material. At the constituent level, the values of the materials vary and are
inhomogeneous Homogeneity and heterogeneity are concepts often used in the sciences and statistics relating to the uniformity of a substance or organism. A material or image that is homogeneous is uniform in composition or character (i.e. color, shape, siz ...
. Precise calculation of the many constituent values is nearly impossible. However, theories have been developed that can produce acceptable approximations which in turn describe useful parameters including the effective
permittivity In electromagnetism, the absolute permittivity, often simply called permittivity and denoted by the Greek letter ''ε'' (epsilon), is a measure of the electric polarizability of a dielectric. A material with high permittivity polarizes more in ...
and permeability of the materials as a whole. In this sense, effective medium approximations are descriptions of a medium (composite material) based on the properties and the relative fractions of its components and are derived from calculations, and effective medium theory.T.C. Choy, "Effective Medium Theory", Oxford University Press, (2016) 241 p. There are two widely used formulae.M. Scheller, C. Jansen, M. Koch, "Applications of Effective Medium Theories in the Terahertz Regime" in ''Recent Optical and Photonic Technologies'', ed. by K.Y. Kim, Intech, Croatia, Vukovar (2010), p. 231. Effective permittivity and permeability are averaged dielectric and magnetic characteristics of a microinhomogeneous medium. They both were derived in quasi-static approximation when the electric field inside a mixture particle may be considered as homogeneous. So, these formulae can not describe the particle size effect. Many attempts were undertaken to improve these formulae.


Applications

There are many different effective medium approximations, each of them being more or less accurate in distinct conditions. Nevertheless, they all assume that the macroscopic system is homogeneous and, typical of all mean field theories, they fail to predict the properties of a multiphase medium close to the
percolation threshold The percolation threshold is a mathematical concept in percolation theory that describes the formation of long-range connectivity in random systems. Below the threshold a giant connected component does not exist; while above it, there exists a ...
due to the absence of long-range correlations or critical fluctuations in the theory. The properties under consideration are usually the
conductivity Conductivity may refer to: *Electrical conductivity, a measure of a material's ability to conduct an electric current **Conductivity (electrolytic), the electrical conductivity of an electrolyte in solution ** Ionic conductivity (solid state), ele ...
\sigma or the dielectric constant \epsilon of the medium. These parameters are interchangeable in the formulas in a whole range of models due to the wide applicability of the Laplace equation. The problems that fall outside of this class are mainly in the field of elasticity and hydrodynamics, due to the higher order tensorial character of the effective medium constants. EMAs can be discrete models, such as applied to resistor networks, or continuum theories as applied to elasticity or viscosity. However, most of the current theories have difficulty in describing percolating systems. Indeed, among the numerous effective medium approximations, only Bruggeman's symmetrical theory is able to predict a threshold. This characteristic feature of the latter theory puts it in the same category as other mean field theories of
critical phenomena In physics, critical phenomena is the collective name associated with the physics of critical points. Most of them stem from the divergence of the correlation length, but also the dynamics slows down. Critical phenomena include scaling relatio ...
.


Bruggeman's model

For a mixture of two materials with permittivities \epsilon_m and \epsilon_d with corresponding volume fractions c_m and c_i, D.A.G. Bruggeman proposed a formula of the following form: \epsilon_=\frac, with H_b=(3c_d-1)\epsilon_d+(3c_m-1) \epsilon_m. (3) Here positive sign before the square root must be altered to negative sign in some cases in order to get correct imaginary part of effective complex permittivity which is related with electromagnetic wave attenuation. The formula is symmetric with respect to swapping the 'd' and 'm' roles. This formula is based on the equality \Delta\Phi=\iint \epsilon_r(\mathbf r)E_n (\mathbf r)ds-\epsilon_ \iint E_0ds=0, (4) where \Delta \Phi is the jump of electric displacement flux all over the integration surface, E_n(\mathbf r) is the component of microscopic electric field normal to the integration surface, \epsilon_r (\mathbf r) is the local relative complex permittivity which takes the value \epsilon_m inside the picked metal particle, the value \epsilon_d inside the picked dielectric particle and the value \epsilon_ outside the picked particle, E_0 is the normal component of the macroscopic electric field. Formula (4) comes out of Maxwell's equality \mathrm(\epsilon_r\mathbf E)=0. Thus only one picked particle is considered in Bruggeman's approach. The interaction with all the other particles is taken into account only in mean field approximation described by \epsilon_. Formula (3) gives a reasonable resonant curve for plasmon excitations in metal nanoparticles if their size is 10 nm or smaller. But it is unable to describe the size dependence for the resonant frequency of plasmon excitations that are observed in experiment


Formulas

Without any loss of generality, we shall consider the study of the effective conductivity (which can be either dc or ac) for a system made up of spherical multicomponent inclusions with different arbitrary conductivities. Then the Bruggeman formula takes the form:


Circular and spherical inclusions

\sum_i\,\delta_i\,\frac\,=\,0\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,(1) In a system of Euclidean spatial dimension n that has an arbitrary number of components, the sum is made over all the constituents. \delta_i and \sigma_i are respectively the fraction and the conductivity of each component, and \sigma_e is the effective conductivity of the medium. (The sum over the \delta_i's is unity.)


Elliptical and ellipsoidal inclusions

\frac\,\delta\alpha+\frac\,=\,0\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,(2) This is a generalization of Eq. (1) to a biphasic system with ellipsoidal inclusions of conductivity \sigma into a matrix of conductivity \sigma_m. The fraction of inclusions is \delta and the system is n dimensional. For randomly oriented inclusions, \alpha\,=\,\frac\sum_^\,\frac\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,(3) where the L_j's denote the appropriate doublet/triplet of depolarization factors which is governed by the ratios between the axis of the ellipse/ellipsoid. For example: in the case of a circle and in the case of a sphere . (The sum over the L_j 's is unity.) The most general case to which the Bruggeman approach has been applied involves bianisotropic ellipsoidal inclusions.


Derivation

The figure illustrates a two-component medium. Consider the cross-hatched volume of conductivity \sigma_1, take it as a sphere of volume V and assume it is embedded in a uniform medium with an effective conductivity \sigma_e. If the electric field far from the inclusion is \overline then elementary considerations lead to a dipole moment associated with the volume \overline\, \propto \,V\,\frac\,\overline\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,(4)\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,. This polarization produces a deviation from \overline. If the average deviation is to vanish, the total polarization summed over the two types of inclusion must vanish. Thus \delta_1\frac\,+\,\delta_2\frac\,=\,0\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,(5) where \delta_1 and \delta_2 are respectively the volume fraction of material 1 and 2. This can be easily extended to a system of dimension n that has an arbitrary number of components. All cases can be combined to yield Eq. (1). Eq. (1) can also be obtained by requiring the deviation in current to vanish . It has been derived here from the assumption that the inclusions are spherical and it can be modified for shapes with other depolarization factors; leading to Eq. (2). A more general derivation applicable to bianisotropic materials is also available.


Modeling of percolating systems

The main approximation is that all the domains are located in an equivalent mean field. Unfortunately, it is not the case close to the percolation threshold where the system is governed by the largest cluster of conductors, which is a fractal, and long-range correlations that are totally absent from Bruggeman's simple formula. The threshold values are in general not correctly predicted. It is 33% in the EMA, in three dimensions, far from the 16% expected from
percolation theory In statistical physics and mathematics, percolation theory describes the behavior of a network when nodes or links are added. This is a geometric type of phase transition, since at a critical fraction of addition the network of small, disconnecte ...
and observed in experiments. However, in two dimensions, the EMA gives a threshold of 50% and has been proven to model percolation relatively well.


Maxwell Garnett equation

In the
Maxwell Garnett James Clerk Maxwell Garnett CBE (1880–1958), commonly known as Maxwell Garnett, was an English educationist, barrister, peace campaigner and physicist. He was Secretary of the League of Nations Union. Maxwell Garnett was born on 13 October 18 ...
approximation, the effective medium consists of a matrix medium with \varepsilon_m and inclusions with \varepsilon_i.
Maxwell Garnett James Clerk Maxwell Garnett CBE (1880–1958), commonly known as Maxwell Garnett, was an English educationist, barrister, peace campaigner and physicist. He was Secretary of the League of Nations Union. Maxwell Garnett was born on 13 October 18 ...
was the son of physicist William Garnett, and was named after Garnett's friend,
James Clerk Maxwell James Clerk Maxwell (13 June 1831 – 5 November 1879) was a Scottish mathematician and scientist responsible for the classical theory of electromagnetic radiation, which was the first theory to describe electricity, magnetism and li ...
. He proposed his formula to explain colored pictures that are observed in glasses doped with metal nanoparticles. His formula has a form \epsilon_=\epsilon_d\left +3c_m\frac\right (1) where \epsilon_ is effective relative complex permittivity of the mixture, \epsilon_d is relative complex permittivity of the background medium containing small spherical inclusions of relative permittivity \epsilon_m with volume fraction of c_m<<1. This formula is based on the equality \epsilon_=\epsilon_d+c_m \frac, (2) where \epsilon_0 is the absolute permittivity of free space and p_m is electric dipole moment of a single inclusion induced by the external electric field . However this equality is good only for
homogeneous medium In physics, a homogeneous material or system has the same properties at every point; it is uniform without irregularities. (accessed November 16, 2009). Tanton, James. "homogeneous." Encyclopedia of Mathematics. New York: Facts On File, Inc., 2 ...
and \epsilon_d=1. Moreover the formula (1) ignores the interaction between single inclusions. Because of these circumstances, formula (1) gives too narrow and too high resonant curve for plasmon excitations in metal nanoparticles of the mixture.


Formula

The Maxwell Garnett equation reads: :\left( \frac \right) =\delta_i \left( \frac\right),\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,(6) where \varepsilon_\mathrm is the effective dielectric constant of the medium, \varepsilon_i of the inclusions, and \varepsilon_m of the matrix; \delta_i is the volume fraction of the inclusions. The Maxwell Garnett equation is solved by: :\varepsilon_\mathrm\,=\,\varepsilon_m\,\frac,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,(7) so long as the denominator does not vanish. A simple MATLAB calculator using this formula is as follows. % This simple MATLAB calculator computes the effective dielectric % constant of a mixture of an inclusion material in a base medium % according to the Maxwell Garnett theory as introduced in: % https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Effective_Medium_Approximations % INPUTS: % eps_base: dielectric constant of base material; % eps_incl: dielectric constant of inclusion material; % vol_incl: volume portion of inclusion material; % OUTPUT: % eps_mean: effective dielectric constant of the mixture. function ps_mean= MaxwellGarnettFormula(eps_base, eps_incl, vol_incl) small_number_cutoff = 1e - 6; if vol_incl < 0 , , vol_incl > 1 disp( WARNING: volume portion of inclusion material is out of range!'; end factor_up = 2 * (1 - vol_incl) * eps_base + (1 + 2 * vol_incl) * eps_incl; factor_down = (2 + vol_incl) * eps_base + (1 - vol_incl) * eps_incl; if abs(factor_down) < small_number_cutoff disp( WARNING: the effective medium is singular!'; eps_mean = 0; else eps_mean = eps_base * factor_up / factor_down; end end


Derivation

For the derivation of the Maxwell Garnett equation we start with an array of polarizable particles. By using the Lorentz local field concept, we obtain the Clausius-Mossotti relation: :\frac= \frac \sum_j N_j \alpha_j Where N_j is the number of particles per unit volume. By using elementary electrostatics, we get for a spherical inclusion with dielectric constant \varepsilon_i and a radius a a polarisability \alpha: : \alpha = \left( \frac \right) a^ If we combine \alpha with the Clausius Mosotti equation, we get: : \left( \frac \right) = \delta_i \left( \frac \right) Where \varepsilon_\mathrm is the effective dielectric constant of the medium, \varepsilon_i of the inclusions; \delta_i is the volume fraction of the inclusions.
As the model of Maxwell Garnett is a composition of a matrix medium with inclusions we enhance the equation: :\left( \frac \right) =\delta_i \left( \frac\right)\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,(8)


Validity

In general terms, the Maxwell Garnett EMA is expected to be valid at low volume fractions \delta_i , since it is assumed that the domains are spatially separated and electrostatic interaction between the chosen inclusions and all other neighbouring inclusions is neglected. The Maxwell Garnett formula, in contrast to Bruggeman formula, ceases to be correct when the inclusions become resonant. In the case of plasmon resonance, the Maxwell Garnett formula is correct only at volume fraction of the inclusions \delta_i < 10 ^. The applicability of effective medium approximation for dielectric multilayers and metal-dielectric multilayers have been studied, showing that there are certain cases where the effective medium approximation does not hold and one needs to be cautious in application of the theory.


Formula describing size effect

A new formula describing size effect was proposed. This formula has a form \epsilon_=\frac, H_=(2-3c_m) \epsilon_d-(1-3c_m) \epsilon_m J(k_m a), (5) J(x)=2\frac, where is the nanoparticle radius and k_m=\sqrt\omega/c is wave number. It is supposed here that the time dependence of the electromagnetic field is given by the factor \mathrm(-i \omega t). In this paper Bruggeman's approach was used, but electromagnetic field for electric-dipole oscillation mode inside the picked particle was computed without applying quasi-static approximation. Thus the function J(k_m a) is due to the field nonuniformity inside the picked particle. In quasi-static region (k_m a<<1, i.e. a ≤ 10 nm for Ag) this function becomes constant J(k_m a)=1 and formula (5) becomes identical with Bruggeman's formula.


Effective permeability formula

Formula for effective permeability of mixtures has a form \mu_=\frac, (6) H_=(2-3c_m)\mu_d-(1-3c_m)\mu_m J(k_m a). Here \mu_ is effective relative complex permeability of the mixture, \mu_d is relative complex permeability of the background medium containing small spherical inclusions of relative permeability \mu_m with volume fraction of c_m<<1. This formula was derived in dipole approximation. Magnetic octupole mode and all other magnetic oscillation modes of odd orders were neglected here. When \mu_m=\mu_d and k_m a<<1 this formula has a simple form \mu_=\mu_d \left( 1+\frac \fraca^2 \epsilon_m \right). (7)


Effective medium theory for resistor networks

For a network consisting of a high density of random resistors, an exact solution for each individual element may be impractical or impossible. In such case, a random resistor network can be considered as a two-dimensional
graph Graph may refer to: Mathematics *Graph (discrete mathematics), a structure made of vertices and edges **Graph theory, the study of such graphs and their properties *Graph (topology), a topological space resembling a graph in the sense of discre ...
and the effective resistance can be modelled in terms of graph measures and geometrical properties of networks. Assuming, edge length \ll electrode spacing and edges to be uniformly distributed, the potential can be considered to drop uniformly from one electrode to another. Sheet resistance of such a random network (R_) can be written in terms of edge (wire) density (N_E), resistivity (\rho), width (w) and thickness (t) of edges (wires) as: R_\,=\,\frac\frac\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,\,(9)


See also

*
Constitutive equation In physics and engineering, a constitutive equation or constitutive relation is a relation between two physical quantities (especially kinetic quantities as related to kinematic quantities) that is specific to a material or substance, and app ...
*
Percolation threshold The percolation threshold is a mathematical concept in percolation theory that describes the formation of long-range connectivity in random systems. Below the threshold a giant connected component does not exist; while above it, there exists a ...


References


Further reading

* * * * * {{cite book , title=Electromagnetic Anisotropy and Bianisotropy: A Field Guide, last1=Mackay , first1=T. G. , last2=Lakhtakia , first2=A. , author-link=Akhlesh Lakhtakia, edition=1st , year=2010 , publisher=World Scientific , location=Singapore, isbn=978-981-4289-61-0 Condensed matter physics Physical chemistry