“…Even after a few centuries of research by distinguished authors, electrostatic charging of insulators is still poorly known, and it often goes out of control because the identity of charge carriers is not known, in nearly every case in the laboratory or in a practical situation. , A persistent problem is the difficulty to produce repeatable and previsible electric potential patterns , that cannot be solved unless the underlying charge-bearing species, transport phenomena, and chemical reactions are well-understood. This undesirable situation is well-documented in the literature, − and it requires new efforts for the speciation of charge carriers in insulators, as well as their quantification . This problem has been addressed recently, and new proposals have been put forward by different authors. − Three different mechanisms for contact electrification were recently emphasized by McCarty and Whitesides: electron transfer for contact between metals or semiconductors, ion transfer for contact involving materials that contain mobile ions, and asymmetric partitioning of hydroxide ions between adsorbed layers of water for contact involving nonionic and insulating materials .…”