The dielectric constant of a more polar molecule should be higher than a molecule which is less polar(polarity can be measured by dipole moment), so methanol should have higher dipole moment than water as $CH_3$ increase electron density around $O$ more than $H$ (Inductive effect), so methanol should also have higher dielectric constant than water.
Similarly dipole moment or dielectric constant of ethanol > methanol, and dipole moment or dielectric constant of dimethyl ether > ethanol. In reality the opposite of what I said happens. Why?
I read this Comparing the dipole moment of water and ethanol but, the answer given still doesn't answer the question why? He says it's because $H$ is more electropositive than $C$ but that contradicts inductive effect.
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Saif
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dielectric constant = (Applied electric field) / (Net electric field) So if dipole of molecule is more, the electric field created by molecules which opposes the external applied electric field will increase and net electric field decreases so dielectric constant is more (by using the formula). So dielectric constant is only proportional to dipole moment? – Saif Jan 31 '24 at 07:50