Capacitor

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Short Description of Topic


This page is all about the Electric Field due to a Point Charge.

Electric Field

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[Two charged plates separated by very small gap s

Electric Field of two uniformly charged disks: A Capacitor

The Electric Field of a Capacitor can be found by the formula:


Electric field near the center of a two-plate capacitor

[math]\displaystyle{ \ E=\frac{Q/A}{\epsilon_0 } }[/math] One plate has charge [math]\displaystyle{ \ +Q }[/math] and other plate has charge [math]\displaystyle{ \ -Q }[/math]; each plate has area A; Direction is perpendicular to the plates. Assumption: separation between capacitor is very small compared to the area of a plate.


Fringe Field (just outside the plates near center of disk)

[math]\displaystyle{ \ E_{fringe}=\frac{Q/A}{2\epsilon_0 }(\frac{z}{R}) }[/math] [math]\displaystyle{ \ s }[/math] is the separation between plates; [math]\displaystyle{ \ R }[/math] is the radius of plate

The Algorithm

Step 1. Cut up the charge distribution into pieces and find the direction of [math]\displaystyle{ \Delta \vec{E} }[/math] at each location

Approximate electric field of a uniformly charged disk [math]\displaystyle{ \ E=\frac{Q/A}{2\epsilon_0 }[1-\frac{s}{R}] }[/math] or [math]\displaystyle{ \ E=\frac{Q/A}{2\epsilon_0 } }[/math]

At location 2, midpoint between two disks, both disks contribute electric field in the same direction. Therefore, [math]\displaystyle{ \vec{E}_{net} }[/math] is the largest at this location.

At location 1, because negative charged plate is closer, [math]\displaystyle{ \vec{E}_{net} }[/math] is to the right.

At location 3, because positive charged plate is closer, [math]\displaystyle{ \vec{E}_{net} }[/math] is to the left.


Step 2. Find the electric field of each plate

To make equation valid at all locations, choose origin at the inner face of the left disk so Electric field of the negative charged plate is [math]\displaystyle{ \ E_{-}=\frac{Q/A}{2\epsilon_0 }(\frac{z}{R}) }[/math] and Electric field of the positive charged plate is [math]\displaystyle{ \ E_{+}=\frac{Q/A}{2\epsilon_0 }(\frac{z}{R}) }[/math]

Examples

References

Matter and Interactions, 4th Edition