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three-halves power law

Also known as the Child-Langmuir Law or the Three-Halves Power Law, Child's Law states that the space charge limited current (SCLC) in a plane-parallel diode varies directly as the three-halves power of the anode voltage Va and inversely as the square of the distance d separating the cathode and the anode.

three halves power law

Where Ia is the anode current, J the current density, and S the anode surface inner area. This assumes the following:

  1. - The electrodes are planar, parallel, equipotential surfaces of infinite dimensions.
  2. - Electrons travel ballistically between electrodes (i.e., no scattering).
  3. - The electrons have zero velocity at the cathode surface.
  4. - In the interelectrode region, only electrons are present.
  5. - The current is space charge limited.
  6. - The anode voltage remains constant for a sufficiently long time so that the anode current is steady.

The assumption of no scattering (ballistic transport) is what makes the predictions of Child-Langmuir Law different from those of Mott-Gurney Law. The latter assumes steady-state drift transport and therefore strong scattering. Wikipedia, Space Charge

See Also


Inverse Square Law Laser Cluster Interactions Law of Atomic Dissociation Law of Atomic Pitch Law of Oscillating Atomic Substances Law of Pitch of Atomic Oscillation Law of Variation of Atomic Oscillation by Electricity Law of Variation of Atomic Oscillation by Sono-thermism Law of Variation of Atomic Oscillation by Temperature Law of Variation of Atomic Pitch by Electricity and Magnetism Law of Variation of Atomic Pitch by Rad-energy Law of Variation of Atomic Pitch by Temperature Law of Variation of Pitch of Atomic Oscillation by Pressure Models of Laser Cluster Interactions Space Charge Square Law

Created by Dale Pond. Last Modification: Monday February 13, 2012 03:08:13 MST by Dale Pond.