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Meaning of Zero Charge boundary condition (AC/DC)
Posted 2020年1月14日 GMT-5 07:33 Electromagnetics, Low-Frequency Electromagnetics Version 5.5 3 Replies
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Hello everyone!
Please help me understand the physical meaning of the Zero Charge boundary condition (BC) in electrostatics. While it is clear that constant/floating potential BC corresponds to a conductor surface, I can't figure out a similar correspondence for the "opposite" Zero Charge BC. The manual says:
".... This is the default boundary condition at exterior boundaries. At interior boundaries, it means that no displacement field can penetrate the boundary and that the electric potential is discontinuous across the boundary"
Why is it the default condition at exterior boundaries? Does it mimmic unbounded space? In what way?
Using this BC at interior boundaries leads to the electric field being tangential and "flowing around" an object with equipotential lines (in 2D) being normal to its surface. What kind of material should behave like this? It is neither conductor nor dielectric. A metamaterial?? What is the meaning of discontinuous potential at this boundary??
There is also a short relevant discussion in the description of "capacitor_fringing_fields" model which says that this BC "...can be treated as a perfectly insulating surface, across which charge cannot redistribute itself" But I still cannot understand what kind of insulation we are speaking about here, physically.
Many thanks for taking care to educate me (and perhaps some other unexperienced users). There must be a simple physical answer, but I just cannot find it on the web or in textbooks.