Transcript Lec12drs
PHY 184
Spring 2007
Lecture 12
Title: Capacitor calculations
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184 Lecture 12
1
Announcements
Homework Set 3 is due tomorrow morning at 8:00 am.
Midterm 1 will take place in class next week on Thursday,
February 8.
Practice exam will be posted in a few days.
Second half of this Thursday’s lecture: review.
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Review of Capacitance
The definition of capacitance is
q
C
V
1C
1F
1V
The unit of capacitance is the farad (F)
The capacitance of a parallel plate capacitor is given by
C
Variables:
A is the area of each plate
d is the distance between the plates
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0 A
d
3
Cylindrical Capacitor
Consider a capacitor constructed of two collinear conducting
cylinders of length L.
The inner cylinder has radius r1 and
the outer cylinder has radius r2.
Both cylinders have charge per
unit length with the inner cylinder
having positive charge and the outer
cylinder having negative charge.
We will assume an ideal cylindrical capacitor
• The electric field points radially from the inner cylinder to the outer
cylinder.
• The electric field is zero outside the collinear cylinders.
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Cylindrical Capacitor (2)
We apply Gauss’ Law to get the electric field between the two cylinder
using a Gaussian surface with radius r and length L as illustrated by the
red lines
0 E dA q
0EA L where A 2 rL
… which we can rewrite to get an
expression for the electric field
between the two cylinders
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184 Lecture 12
E
2 0 r
5
Cylindrical Capacitor (3)
As we did for the parallel plate capacitor, we define the voltage
difference across the two cylinders to be V=V1 – V2.
r2
V1 V2 r
1
r
E ds r
2
1
dr
2 0r
r2
ln
2 0 r1
The capacitance of a cylindrical capacitor is
q
C
V
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L
2 0 L
ln r2 / r1 ln r2 / r1
2 0
Note that C depends on geometrical
factors.
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Spherical Capacitor
Consider a spherical capacitor formed by two concentric conducting
spheres with radii r1 and r2
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Spherical Capacitor (2)
Let’s assume that the inner sphere has charge +q and the outer sphere
has charge –q.
The electric field is perpendicular to the surface of both spheres and
points radially outward
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Spherical Capacitor (3)
To calculate the electric field, we use a Gaussian surface
consisting of a concentric sphere of radius r such that r1 < r < r2
The electric field is always perpendicular to the Gaussian surface so
… which reduces to
E
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q
4 0 r
…makes sense!
2
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Spherical Capacitor (4)
To get the electric potential we follow a method similar to the one we
used for the cylindrical capacitor and integrate from the negatively
charged sphere to the positively charged sphere
r1
r1
r2
r2
V Edr
q 1 1
dr
2
4 0 r
4 0 r1 r2
q
Using the definition of capacitance we find
q
q
4 0
C
V
q 1 1 1 1
4 r r r r
0
1
2
1
2
The capacitance of a spherical capacitor is then
r1r2
C 4 0
r2 r1
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Capacitance of an Isolated Sphere
We obtain the capacitance of a single conducting sphere by
taking our result for a spherical capacitor and moving the
outer spherical conductor infinitely far away.
Using our result for a spherical capacitor…
C
q
V
q
4 0
q 1 1 1 1
4 0 r1 r2 r1 r2
…with r2 = and r1 = R we find
C 4 0 R
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…meaning V = q/40R
(we already knew that!)
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Example
The “plates” of a spherical capacitor have radii 38 mm and
40 mm.
b=40 mm
a=38 mm
a) Calculate the capacitance.
b) Calculate the area A of a parallel-plate capacitor with the
same plate separation and capacitance.
d
A?
Answers: (a) 84.5 pF; (b) 191 cm2
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Clicker Question
Two metal objects have charges of 70pC and -70pC,
resulting in a potential difference (voltage) of 20 V
between them. What is the capacitance of the
system?
A) 140 pF
B) 3.5 pF
C) 7 pF
D) 0
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q 70 pC
C
3.5 pF
V 20 V
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Clicker Question
Two metal objects have charges of 70pC and -70pC,
resulting in a potential difference (voltage) of 20 V
between them. How does the capacitance C change if
we double the charge on each object?
A) C doubles
B) C is cut in half
C) C does not change
The capacitance is the constant of proportionality between change and voltage. It depends
on the geometry not on the charge or voltage.
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Capacitors in Circuits
A circuit is a set of electrical devices connected
with conducting wires.
Capacitors can be wired together in circuits in
parallel or series
• Capacitors in circuits connected by wires such that the
positively charged plates are connected together and the
negatively charged plates are connected together, are
connected in parallel.
• Capacitors wired together such that the positively
charged plate of one capacitor is connected to the
negatively charged plate of the next capacitor are
connected in series.
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Capacitors in Parallel
Consider an electrical circuit with three capacitors wired in
parallel
Each of three capacitors has one plate connected to the
positive terminal of a battery with voltage V and one plate
connected to the negative terminal.
The potential difference V across each capacitor is the
same.
.. key point for capacitors in parallel
We can write the charge on each capacitor as …
q1 C1V q2 C2V q3 C3V
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Capacitors in Parallel (2)
We can consider the three capacitors as one equivalent
capacitor Ceq that holds a total charge q given by
q q1 q2 q3 C1V C2V C3V C1 C2 C3 V
We can now define Ceq by
Ceq C1 C2 C3
q CeqV
n
A general result for n capacitors in parallel is
Ceq Ci
i 1
If we can identify capacitors in a circuit that are wired in
parallel, we can replace them with an equivalent capacitance
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Capacitors in Series
Consider a circuit with three capacitors wired in series
The positively charged plate of C1 is connected to the
positive terminal of the battery.
The negatively charge plate of C1 is connected to the
positively charged plate of C2.
The negatively charged plate of C2 is connected to the
positively charge plate of C3.
The negatively charge plate of C3 is connected to the
negative terminal of the battery.
The battery produces an equal charge q on each capacitor because the
battery induces a positive charge on the positive place of C1, which
induces a negative charge on the opposite plate of C1, which induces a
positive charge on C2, etc.
.. key point for capacitors in series
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Capacitors in Series (2)
Knowing that the charge is the same on all three capacitors
we can write
1
q
q
q
1
1
V V1 V2 V3
q
C1 C2 C3
C1 C2 C3
We can express an equivalent capacitance Ceq as
q
V
Ceq
1
1
1
1
Ceq C1 C2 C3
We can generalize to n capacitors in series
n
1
1
Ceq i 1 Ci
If we can identify capacitors in a circuit that are wired in series, we can
replace them with an equivalent capacitance.
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Clicker Question
C1=C2=C3=30 pF are placed in series. A battery supplies 9 V. What is the
charge q on each capacitor?
A) q=90 pC
B) q=1 pC
C) q=3 pC
D) q=180 pC
Ceq = 10 pF
Answer: 90 pC
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Clicker Question
C1=C2=C3=1 pF are placed in parallel. What is the voltage of the battery
if the total charge of the capacitor arrangement, q1+q2+q3, is 90 pC?
A) 180 V
B) 10 V
C) 9 V
D) 30 V
Ceq = 3 pF
Answer: 30 volts
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