Charging and Discharging a Capacitor: Difference between revisions
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CLAIMED BY SAMAH HISAMUDDIN (Spring 2016) | CLAIMED BY SAMAH HISAMUDDIN (Spring 2016) | ||
'''Edited by Priya Arya (Fall 2016)''' | '''Edited by Priya Arya (Fall 2016)''' | ||
Revision as of 17:24, 25 November 2016
The main purpose of having a capacitor in a circuit is to store electric charge. For intro physics you can almost think of them as a battery.
CLAIMED BY SAMAH HISAMUDDIN (Spring 2016)
Edited by Priya Arya (Fall 2016)
The Main Idea
Discharging a Capacitor
A circuit with a charged capacitor has an electric fringe field inside the wire. This field creates an electron current. The electron current will move opposite the direction of the electric field. However, so long as the electron current is running, the capacitor is being discharged. The electron current is moving negative charges away from the negatively charged plate and towards the positively charged plate. Once the charges even out or are neutralized the electric field will cease to exist. Therefore the current stops running.
In the example where the charged capacitor is connected to a light bulb you can see the electric field is large in the beginning but decreases over time. The electron current is also greater in the beginning and decreases over time. Because of this the light bulb starts out shining brightly but slowly dims and goes out.
Charging a Capacitor
Charging a capacitor isn’t much more difficult than discharging and the same principles still apply. The circuit consists of two batteries, a light bulb, and a capacitor. Essentially, the electron current from the batteries will continue to run until the circuit reaches equilibrium (the capacitor is “full”). Just like when discharging, the bulb starts out bright while the electron current is running, but it slowly dims and goes out as the capacitor charges.
The electron current will flow out the negative end of the battery as usual (conventional current will exit the positive end). Positive charges begin to build up on the right plate and negative charges on the left. The electric field slowly decreases until the net electric field is 0. The fringe field is equal and opposite to the electric field caused by everything else.
If you were to draw a box around the capacitor and label it with positive and negative ends it would look like a battery. It also behaves like a battery. The electron current will continue to flow and the electric field will continue to exist until the potential difference across the capacitor is equal to that of the batteries (sum of emf of all batteries in the circuit).
Resistors
The amount of resistance in the circuit will determine how long it takes a capacitor to charge or discharge. The less resistance (a light bulb with a thicker filament) the faster the capacitor will charge or discharge. The more resistance (a light bulb with a thin filament) the longer it will take the capacitor to charge or discharge. The thicker filament bulb will be brighter, but won't last as long as a thin filament bulb. V = IR, The larger the resistance the smaller the current.
A Mathematical Model
V = IR
E = (Q/A)/ε0
C = Q/V = ε0A/s
V = (Q/A)s/ε0
A Computational Model
Examples
Question 1
Doubling the radius of the capacitor
A) quarters the capacitance
B) halves the capacitance
C) doubles the capacitance
D) quadruples the capacitance
Doubling the radius of the capacitor
A) quarters the electric field between the plates
B) halves the electric field between the plates
C) doubles the electric field between the plates
D) quadruples the electric field between the plates
Doubling the distance between the plates
A) quarters the capacitance
B) halves the capacitance
C) doubles the capacitance
D) quadruples the capacitance
Doubling the capacitance
A) quarters the electric field between the plates
B) halves the electric field between the plates
C) doubles the electric field between the plates
D) quadruples the electric field between the plates
ANS: D, B, A, C
Question 2
What is the current at points A,B, and C when the capacitor is not yet charged and when the capacitor is fully charged?
When the capacitor is fully charged what is the charge on the plates?
Answer:
Question 3
The switch has been closed for a long time.
What is the current at each point?
What is the charge on the capacitor?
Is the light bulb lit?
The switch is opened.
Immediately after the switch is opened is the bulb lit? After a while?
What current is initially running through the bulb?
Which direction is the current moving?
Answer:
Connectedness
Capacitor can be temporary batteries. Capacitors in parallel can continue to supply current to the circuit if the battery runs out. This is interesting because the capacitor gets its charge from being connected to a chemical battery, but the capacitor itself supplies voltage without chemicals.
Capacitors are being researched for applications in electromagnetic armour and electromagnetic weapons. Currently capacitors are used as detonators in nuclear weapons. Capacitors also are largely involved in separations of AC and DC components.
History
Put this idea in historical context. Give the reader the Who, What, When, Where, and Why. In 1745 Ewald Georg von Kleist was the first to "discover" capacitors in Germany. He connected a generator to glass jars of water and charged them. When he touched the wire they were connected to he shocked himself (discharged the capacitor). At the same time Pieter van Musschenbroek made a similar capacitor and named it the Leyden Jar. When Benjamin Franklin studied the Leyden Jar he determined, among other things, that the charge was stored on the glass. During his studies Franklin was the first to give the capacitor the name battery. Since then batteries have most often been electro-chemical cells of capacitors made of sheets of conducting and dielectric material.
See also
Further reading
- Williams, Henry Smith. "A History of Science Volume II, Part VI: The Leyden Jar Discovered"
- Keithley, Joseph F. (1999). The Story of Electrical and Magnetic Measurements: From 500 BC to the 1940s
External links
References
- Chabay, Ruth W., and Bruce A. Sherwood. Matter and Interactions. 3rd ed. Vol. 2. N.p.: John Wiley and Sons, 2002. Print.
- "Capacitor." Wikipedia. Wikimedia Foundation, n.d. Web. 05 Dec. 2015.