Physics reminder: ohmic and dielectric losses
Ohmic losses
The flowing of an electric current in a conductor involves energy losses in the form of heat. These losses are called the ohmic losses or losses by Joule effect.
Dielectric losses
When an AC electric field is applied to a real dielectric medium, a shift phase appears between the time variations of the electric flux density and the electric field intensity .
The expl anati on at microscopic scale is the following: the interactions between the molecules tend “to slow down” the rotation of their corresponding dipoles that are trying to align themselves to the field. Thus, the time variation of the polarization is delayed with respect to the electric field intensity . The relation valid in a linear medium is no longer applicable for a real quantity ε.
In order to take into account the shift-phase between the electric flux density and the electric field intensity in harmonic time variation fields, a complex permittivity ε = ε'- j ε " is used.
In a time harmonic electric field:E(t) = E0ejωt
The electric flux density has the expression: D(t) = εE0ejωt = (ε'- jε") E0ejωt
An AC electric field in a dielectric material generates an active power called dielectric hysteresis power losses.
The dielectric hysteresis losses phenomenon is characterized by the quantity: tg δh = ε"/ ε'
where δh is called the dielectric hysteresis losses angle.
Total losses
An AC electric field in a real material (dielectric and conductor) generates an active power, which is the sum between the ohmic losses and the dielectric losses.
The combination of ohmic and dielectric losses in the real materials is characterized by the quantity:tgδ = (σ + ωε")/(ωε')
where δ is called the losses angle.