Capacitance and Capacitors
Capacitance and Capacitors
Capacitance and Capacitors
Capacitance
A capacitor is basically two
parallel conducting plates with air
or insulating material in between. E
V0 L V1
When a capacitor is connected to an external
potential, charges flow onto the plates and create a
potential difference between the plates.
Capacitor
plates build up
+- charge.
V
+-
If the external potential is
disconnected, charges remain on conducting
+ -
V
The magnitude of charge acquired by each plate of a
capacitor is Q=CV where C is the capacitance of the
capacitor.
Q
C C is always
V positive.
Capacitance.
You must be able to apply the equation C=Q/V.
Q Q Q 0 A
This lets us calculate C C
for a parallel plate V Ed Q d
d
capacitor. 0 A
Q
Reminders: C
V
Q is the magnitude of the charge on either plate.
V is actually the magnitude of the potential
difference between the plates. V is really |V|.
C is always positive.
V0 d V1
A
Coaxial Cylinder Capacitance
l b dr l b
b r
2 0 a r
V = - = - ln
2 0 a a
Q
Q l L l L E
C= = =
V V l b
ln
2 0 a d
-Q
2 0L
C=
b
ln
a
C 2 0
Lowercase c is capacitance per unit length:
c= =
L b
ln
a
Isolated Sphere Capacitance
+Q
Q b dr Q 1 1
V
40
a r 2
40 a b
-Q
Q 40
C
V 1 1
a b
alternative calculation of capacitance of isolated sphere
b
Q 4 0
C a
V 1 1
a b +Q
-Q
C
8.85 10 12
0.2 0.03
0.001
d = 0.001
12 area = 0.2 x 0.03
C 53 10 F
C 53 pF
0V
Q CV
Q 53 10 12 12 V= 12V
Q 6.4 10 10 C
+12 V
V 0V
E
d
12V V= 12V
E E
0.001 m
d = 0.001
r V
E 12000 ,"up." +12 V
m
Capacitance.
You must be able to apply the equation C=Q/V.
C2
a b
C3
+ -
V
The potential difference (voltage drop) from a to b must
equal V.
Vab = V = voltage drop across each individual capacitor.
C1
Q=CV Q1
+ C2 -
Q1 = C 1 V a
Q2
& Q2 = C2 V C3
Q3
& Q3 = C3 V + -
Q1 + Q2 + Q3 = Ceq V = Q Important!
Summarizing the equations on the last slide: C1
Q1 = C1 V Q2 = C2 V Q3 = C3 V C2
a b
Q1 + Q2 + Q3 = Ceq V C3
+ -
Using Q1 = C1V, etc., gives
V
C1V + C2V + C3V = Ceq V
C1 + C2 + C3 = Ceq (after dividing both sides by V)
Generalizing:
Ceq = Ci (capacitors in parallel)
Circuits Containing Capacitors in Series
Capacitors connected in series:
C1 C2 C3
+ -
+Q V -Q
+ -
V
These equal and opposite charges came from the
originally neutral circuit regions A and B.
C1 C2 C3
a A B b
+Q -Q +Q -Q +Q -Q
V1 V2 V3
+ -
The charges on C1, C2, and C3 are the same, and are
Q = C 1 V1 Q = C 2 V2 Q = C 3 V3
+Q -Q
V
+ -
Q = C 1 V1 Q = C 2 V2 Q = C 3 V3 Important!
Vab = V = V1 + V2 + V3.
Q = Ceq V
Q Q Q
V= + +
Substituting for V1, V2, and V3: C1 C2 C3
Substituting for V: Q Q Q Q
= + +
Ceq C1 C2 C3
Dividing both sides by Q:
1 1 1 1
1 1 = + +
= Ceq C1 C2 C3
Ceq i Ci
Example: determine the
capacitance of a single
C2
capacitor that will have the
same effect as the C1
combination shown. Use C3
C1 = C2 = C3 = C.
C23 = C2 + C3 = C + C = 2C
Now I see a series combination.
C23 = 2C C1= C
1 1 1
= +
Ceq C1 C23
1 1 1 2 1 3
= + = + =
Ceq C 2C 2C 2C 2C
2
Ceq = C
3
Example: for the capacitor circuit shown, C1 = 3F, C2 =
6F, C3 = 2F, and C4 =4F. (a) Find the equivalent
capacitance. (b) if V=12 V, find the potential
difference across C4.
C1 C2
C4
C3