Insulative
Insulative materials do not allow charges to move across their surfaces
or through their volume. Charge placed in one spot on an insulative object
will stay in that location. If a charged insulator is grounded, charges
will not move to ground. Grounding is not an effective method of neutralizing
insu- lators. Insulators can have both negatively and positively charged
areas on the same object. Because in- sulators do not allow charge movement,
they can accumulate massive amounts of charge. Static fields on insulators
are not necessarily permanent; they will eventually be neutralized by
gradual recombination with free ions. |
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