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Biophysical Journal 16: 1341-1348 (1976)
© 1976 the Biophysical Society

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Induced piezoelectricity in isotropic biomaterial.

R L Zimmerman

ABSTRACT

Isotropic material can be made to exhibit piezoelectric effects by the application of a constant electric field. For insulators, the piezoelectric strain constant is proportional to the applied electric field and for semiconductors, an additional out-of-phase component of piezoelectricity is proportional to the electric current density in the sample. The two induced coefficients are proportional to the strain-dependent dielectric constant (depsilon/dS + epsilon) and resistivity (drho/dS - rho), respectively. The latter is more important at frequencies such that rhoepsilonomega less than 1, often the case in biopolymers.Signals from induced piezoelectricity in nature may be larger than those from true piezoelectricity.







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Copyright © 1976 by the Biophysical Society.