Bulk electrets can be prepared by heating or melting the material, then cooling it in the presence of a strong electric field. The electric field repositions the charge carriers or aligns the dipoles within the material. When the material cools, solidification "freezes" the dipoles in position. Materials used for electrets are usually
waxes,
polymers or
resins. One of the earliest recipes consists of 45%
carnauba wax, 45% white
rosin, and 10% white
beeswax, melted, mixed together, and left to cool in a static electric field of several kilovolts/cm. The
thermo-dielectric effect, related to this process, was first described by Brazilian researcher
Joaquim Costa Ribeiro. Electrets can also be manufactured by embedding excess negative charge within a dielectric using a
particle accelerator, or by
stranding charges on, or near, the surface using
high voltage corona discharges, a process called
corona charging. Excess charge within an electret decays exponentially. The
decay constant is a function of the material's relative
dielectric constant and its bulk
resistivity. Materials with extremely high resistivity, such as
PTFE, may retain excess charge for many hundreds of years. Most commercially produced electrets are based on
fluoropolymers (e.g.
amorphous Teflon) machined to thin films. ==See also==