piezoelectric effect


noun

the property exhibited by some nonconducting crystals of becoming electrically polarized when mechanically strained and of becoming mechanically strained when an electric field is applied.

British Dictionary definitions for piezoelectric effect

piezoelectric effect

piezoelectricity

/ (paɪˌiːzəʊɪlɛkˈtrɪsɪtɪ) /

noun

physics
  1. the production of electricity or electric polarity by applying a mechanical stress to certain crystals
  2. the converse effect in which stress is produced in a crystal as a result of an applied potential difference

Derived forms of piezoelectric effect

piezoelectrically, adverb

Scientific definitions for piezoelectric effect

piezoelectric effect
[ pī-ē′zō-ĭ-lĕktrĭk ]

The generation of an electric charge in certain nonconducting materials, such as quartz crystals and ceramics, when they are subjected to mechanical stress (such as pressure or vibration), or the generation of vibrations in such materials when they are subjected to an electric field. Piezoelectric materials exposed to a fairly constant electric field tend to vibrate at a precise frequency with very little variation, making them useful as time-keeping devices in electronic clocks, as used in wristwatches and computers.