Title: Lecture 4 Capacitance and Capacitors
1Lecture 4Capacitance and Capacitors
Chapter 16.6 ? 16.10
Outline
- Definition of Capacitance
- Simple Capacitors
- Combinations of Capacitors
- Capacitors with Dielectrics
2Capacitance
History
Introduction
General definition
The capacitance C of a capacitor is the ratio of
the charge (Q) on either conductor plate to the
potential difference (?V) between the plates.
Units of capacitance are farads (F) 1F ? 1C/1V
Q C ? ? ?V
C(Earth) 1 F C(adult) 150 pF 150 10?12 F
3The Parallel-Plate Capacitor
The capacitance of a parallel-plate capacitor
whose plates are separated by air is
A is the area of one of the plates d is the
distance between the plates ?0 is permittivity of
free space
A C ?0 ? d
More about capacitors
4Capacitors
Problem A parallel-plane capacitor has an area
of A5cm2 and a plate separation of d5mm. Find
its capacitance.
Unit conversion A 5 cm2 5 10?4 m2
d 5 mm 5 10?3
m C ?0 A/d 8.85 10?12 C2 / (N m2) 5 10?4 m2 /
5 10?3 m 8.85 10?13 C2/(N m) 8.85 10?13 F
0.885 pF N/C V/m ? C/N m/V, FC/V C2/(N m)C
(C/N)/m C (m/V)/m C/V F
5Combinations of Capacitors
In real electric circuits capacitors can be
connected in various ways. In order to design a
circuit with desired capacitance, equivalent
capacitance of certain combinations of capacitors
can be calculated.
- There are 2 typical combinations of capacitors
- Parallel combination
- Series combination
6Parallel Combination
7Parallel Combination
- The left plate of each capacitor is connected to
the positive terminal of a battery by a wire ? - the left plates are at the same potential ?
- the potential differences across the capacitors
are the same, equal to the voltage of the battery
(?V). - The charge flow ceases when the voltage across
the capacitors equals to that of the battery and
the capacitors reach their maximum charge.
Examples
Q Q1 Q2 Q1 C1 ?V Q2 C2 ?V
Q Ceq ?V Ceq ?V C1 ?V C2 ?V Ceq C1 C2
8Series Combination
9Series Combination
The magnitude of the charge is the same on all
the plates. The equivalent capacitor must have a
charge Q on the right plate and Q on the left
plate.
Q ?V ? Ceq
Examples
?V ?V1 ?V2 ?V1 Q/C1 ?V2 Q/C2
10Energy Stored in a Capacitor
The work required to move a charge ?Q through a
potential difference ?V is ?W ?V ?Q.
?V Q/C, Q is the total charge on the
capacitor. The voltage on the capacitor linearly
increases with the magnitude of the
charge. Additional work increases the energy
stored.
W ½ Q ?V ½ (C ?V) ?V ½C (?V)2 Q2/2C
11Capacitors with Dielectrics
A dielectric is an insulating material. The
dielectric filling the space between the plates
completely increases the capacitance by the
factor ? gt 1, called the dielectric constant.
If ?V0 is the potential difference (voltage)
across a capacitor of a capacitance C0 and a
charge Q0 in the absence of a dielectric.
Filling the capacitor with a dielectric reduces
the voltage by the factor ? to ?V, so that ?V
?V0/?.
C Q0/?V Q0/?V0/? ? Q0/?V0 ? C0
12Dielectric Strength
For a parallel-plate capacitor C ? ?0 A/d
The formula shows that the capacitance can be
made very large by decreasing the plate
separation. In practice, the lowest value of d is
limited by the electric discharge through the
dielectric. The discharge occurs when the
electric field in the dielectric material reaches
its maximum, called dielectric strength. Dielectri
c strength of air is 3 106 V/m.
13Summary
- Capacitance is defined as the charge over the
potential difference - Capacitance of parallel-plate capacitor is
directly proportional to the plate area and
inversely proportional to the plate separation - The equivalent capacitance of a parallel
combination of capacitors equals to the sum of
individual capacitances - The inverse equivalent capacitance of a series
combination of capacitors equals to the sum of
the inverse individual capacitances - Placing a dielectric between the plates of a
capacitor increases the capacitance by a factor
?, called the dielectric constant