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Capacitance and Capacitors: Understanding their Basics and Applications

Explore the concept of capacitance and how it is measured. Learn about parallel-plate capacitors, their characteristics, and electric fields. Discover the behavior of capacitors in series and parallel circuits.

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Capacitance and Capacitors: Understanding their Basics and Applications

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  1. Chapter 23 Capacitance

  2. Michael Faraday 1791 – 1867 Capacitance • The capacitance, C, is a measure of the amount of electric charge stored (or separated) for a given electric potential • SI unit – Farad (F): 1 F = 1 C / V • A 1 Farad capacitance is very large – µF or pF capacitances are more common

  3. Capacitor • A capacitor is a device used in a variety of electric circuits to store electric charge • Capacitance of a capacitor is the ratio of the magnitude of the charge on either conductor (plate) to the magnitude of the potential difference between the conductors (plates) • This capacitance of a device depends on the geometric arrangement of the conductors

  4. Parallel-Plate Capacitor • This capacitor consists of two parallel plates (each of area A) separated by a distance d each carrying equal and opposite charges • Each plate is connected to a terminal of the battery • The battery is a source of potential difference • If the capacitor is initially uncharged, the battery establishes an electric field in the connecting wires

  5. Parallel-Plate Capacitor • The field applies a force on electrons in the wire just outside of the plates, causing the electrons to move onto the negative plate until equilibrium is achieved • The plate, the wire and the terminal are all at the same potential, and there is no field present in the wire and the movement of the electrons ceases • At the other plate, electrons are moving away from the plate and leaving it positively charged

  6. Parallel-Plate Capacitor • The electric field due to one plate • The total electric field between the plates is given by • The field outside the plates is zero

  7. Parallel-Plate Capacitor • In the final configuration, the potential difference across the capacitor plates is the same as that between the terminals of the battery • For a parallel-plate capacitor whose plates are separated by air:

  8. Electric Field in a Parallel-Plate Capacitor • The electric field between the plates is uniform near the center and nonuniform near the edges • The field may be taken as constant throughout the region between the plates

  9. Spherical Capacitor

  10. Chapter 23Problem 26 A parallel-plate capacitor with 1.1-mm plate spacing has ±2.3 µC on its plates when charged to 150 V. What’s the plate area?

  11. Electric Circuits • A circuit is a collection of objects usually containing a source of electrical energy (such as a battery) connected to elements that convert electrical energy to other forms • A circuit diagram – a simplified representation of an actual circuit – is used to show the path of the real circuit • Circuit symbols are used to represent various elements (e.g., lines are used to represent wires, battery’s positive terminal is indicated by a longer line)

  12. Capacitors in Parallel • When capacitors are first connected in parallel in the circuit, electrons are transferred from the left plates through the battery to the right plates, leaving the left plates positively charged and the right plates negatively charged • The flow of charges ceases when the voltage across the capacitors equals that of the battery • The capacitors reach their maximum charge when the flow of charge ceases

  13. Capacitors in Parallel • The total charge is equal to the sum of the charges on the capacitors: Qtotal = Q1 + Q2 • The potential differences across the capacitors is the same and each is equal to the voltage of the battery • A circuit diagram for two capacitors in parallel

  14. Capacitors in Parallel • The capacitors can be replaced with one capacitor with a equivalent capacitance Ceq – the equivalent capacitor must have exactly the same external effect on the circuit as the original capacitors

  15. Capacitors in Parallel • For more than two capacitors in parallel: • The equivalent capacitance of a parallel combination of capacitors is greater than any of the individual capacitors

  16. Capacitors in Series • When a battery is connected to the circuit, electrons are transferred from the left plate of C1 to the right plate of C2through the battery • As this negative charge accumulates on the right plate of C2, an equivalent amount of negative charge is removed from the left plate of C2, leaving it with an excess positive charge • All of the right plates gain charges of –Q and all the left plates have charges of +Q

  17. Capacitors in Series • An equivalent capacitor can be found that performs the same function as the series combination • The potential differences add up to the battery voltage

  18. Capacitors in Series • For more than two capacitors in series: • The equivalent capacitance is always less than any individual capacitor in the combination

  19. Problem-Solving Strategy • Be careful with the choice of units • Combine capacitors: • When two or more unequal capacitors are connected in series, they carry the same charge, but the potential differences across them are not the same • The capacitances add as reciprocals and the equivalent capacitance is always less than the smallest individual capacitor

  20. Problem-Solving Strategy • Be careful with the choice of units • Combine capacitors: • When two or more capacitors are connected in parallel, the potential differences across them are the same • The charge on each capacitor is proportional to its capacitance • The capacitors add directly to give the equivalent capacitance

  21. Problem-Solving Strategy • Redraw the circuit and continue • Repeat the process until there is only one single equivalent capacitor • To find the charge on, or the potential difference across, one of the capacitors, start with your final equivalent capacitor and work back through the circuit reductions

  22. Equivalent Capacitance

  23. Chapter 23Problem 51 What’s the equivalent capacitance measured between A and B in the figure?

  24. Energy Stored in a Capacitor • Before the switch is closed, the energy is stored as chemical energy in the battery • When the switch is closed, the energy is transformed from chemical to electric potential energy • The electric potential energy is related to the separation of the positive and negative charges on the plates • A capacitor can be described as a device that stores energy as well as charge

  25. Energy Stored in a Capacitor • Assume the capacitor is being charged and, at some point, has a charge q on it • The work needed to transfer a charge from one plate to the other: • The total work required: • The work done in charging the capacitor appears as electric potential energy U:

  26. Energy Stored in a Capacitor • This applies to a capacitor of any geometry • The energy stored increases as the charge increases and as the potential difference increases • The energy can be considered to be stored in the electric field • For a parallel-plate capacitor, the energy can be expressed in terms of the field as U = ½ (εoAd)E2

  27. Capacitors with Dielectrics • A dielectric is an insulating material (e.g., rubber, plastic, etc.) • When placed between the plates of a capacitor, it increases the capacitance: C = κ Co = κ εo (A/d) • κ - dielectric constant • The capacitance is multiplied by the factor κ when the dielectric completely fills the region between the plates

  28. Capacitors with Dielectrics • Tubular – metallic foil interlaced with thin sheets of paraffin-impregnated paper rolled into a cylinder • Oil filled (for high-V capacitors) – interwoven metallic plates are immersed in silicon oil • Electrolytic (to store large amounts of charge at relatively low voltages) – electrolyte is a solution that conducts electricity via motion of ions in the solution

  29. Dielectric Strength • For any given plate separation, there is a maximum electric field that can be produced in the dielectric before it breaks down and begins to conduct • This maximum electric field is called the dielectric strength (breakdown field)

  30. Chapter 23Problem 56 A 470-pF capacitor consists of two 15-cm-radius circular plates, insulated with polystyrene. Find (a) the thickness of the polystyrene and (b) the capacitor’s working voltage.

  31. An Atomic Description of Dielectrics • The molecules that make up the dielectric are modeled as dipoles; in the absence of an electric field they are randomly oriented • An external electric field produces a torque on the molecules partially aligning them with the electric field

  32. An Atomic Description of Dielectrics • The presence of the positive (negative) charge on the dielectric effectively induces some of the negative (positive) charge on the metal • This allows more charge on the plates for a given applied voltage and the capacitance increases

  33. Answers to Even Numbered Problems Chapter 23: Problem 22 14 C

  34. Answers to Even Numbered Problems Chapter 23: Problem 32 • 6.0 μF • 0.55 μF

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