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Capacitors and Dielectric PDF

1. A capacitor consists of two conductive plates separated by an insulating material. It stores electric charge. 2. The amount of charge a capacitor can store is proportional to the potential difference between its plates. The proportionality constant is called capacitance. 3. Common applications of capacitors include computer memory, camera flashes, surge protectors, and electronic circuits.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
112 views29 pages

Capacitors and Dielectric PDF

1. A capacitor consists of two conductive plates separated by an insulating material. It stores electric charge. 2. The amount of charge a capacitor can store is proportional to the potential difference between its plates. The proportionality constant is called capacitance. 3. Common applications of capacitors include computer memory, camera flashes, surge protectors, and electronic circuits.

Uploaded by

JACOB MERCADO
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Capacitors

Capacitors
• A capacitor is a device that stores electric
charge.

• A capacitor consists of two conductors


separated by an insulator.

• Capacitors have many applications:


– Computer RAM memory and keyboards.
– Electronic flashes for cameras.
– Electric power surge protectors.
– Radios and electronic circuits.
Types of Capacitors

Parallel-Plate Capacitor Cylindrical Capacitor


A cylindrical capacitor is a parallel-plate capacitor that has
been rolled up with an insulating layer between the plates.
Capacitors and Capacitance
A capacitor in a simple
electric circuit.

Charge Q stored:

Q = CV
The stored charge Q is proportional to the potential
difference V between the plates. The capacitance C is
the constant of proportionality, measured in Farads.
Farad = Coulomb / Volt
Parallel-Plate Capacitor
• A simple parallel-plate
capacitor consists of
two conducting plates
+Q -Q
of area A separated by
a distance d.
• Charge +Q is placed
on one plate and –Q on +Q -Q
the other plate.
• An electric field E is
created between the
plates.
What is a capacitor?
• Electronic component
• Two conducting surfaces separated by an insulating
material
• Stores charge
• Uses
– Time delays
– Filters
– Tuned circuits
Capacitor construction
• Two metal plates
• Separated by insulating
material
• ‘Sandwich’ construction
• ‘Swiss roll’ structure
• Capacitance set by...

A
C=ε
d
Defining capacitance
• ‘Good’ capacitors store a lot of charge…
• …when only a small voltage is applied
• Capacitance is charge stored per volt
• Capacitance is measured in farads F
– Big unit so nF, mF and µF are used

Q
C=
V
Graphical representation

Equating to the equation of a straight line

Q Q Gradient term is
C= the capacitance
V of the capacitor
Charge stored is
Q = CV directly
proportional to

y = mx the applied
voltage
V
Energy stored by a capacitor
• By general definition E=QV
– product of charge and voltage
• By graphical consideration...
Q
1
E = QV
2
Area term is
the energy
stored in the
V capacitor
Other expressions for energy
• By substitution of Q=CV 1
E = QV
2
1
E = CV 2

2
2
1Q
E=
2 C
Charging a capacitor
• Current flow
I
• Initially
– High
• Finally
– Zero
• Exponential model
• Charging factors
– Capacitance
– Resistance
t
Discharging a capacitor
• Current flow
• Initially t
– High
– Opposite to
charging
• Finally
– Zero
• Exponential model
• Discharging factors
– Capacitance
– Resistance
I
Discharging a Capacitor
• Initially, the rate of discharge is high because the
potential difference across the plates is large.
• As the potential difference falls, so too does the
current flowing
• Think pressure

As water level
falls, rate of
flow decreases
• At some time t, with charge Q on the
capacitor, the current that flows in an
interval ∆t is:

I = ∆Q/∆t

• And I = V/R
• But since V=Q/C, we can say that
I = Q/RC
• So the discharge current is proportional to
the charge still on the plates.
• For a changing current, the drop in
charge, ∆Q is given by:

∆Q = -I∆t (minus because charge Iarge


at t = 0 and falls as t increases)

• So ∆Q = -Q∆t/RC (because I = Q/RC)

• Or -∆Q/Q = ∆t/RC
Voltage and charge characteristics
V V
or or
Q Q

t t
• Charging Discharging

−t −t
V = V0 (1 − e RC
) Q = Q0 e RC
Dielectrics
• A dielectric is an insulating material (e.g.
paper, plastic, glass).

• A dielectric placed between the conductors of


a capacitor increases its capacitance by a
factor κ, called the dielectric constant.
C= κCo (Co=capacitance without
dielectric) ε0 A A
C =κ =ε
d d
• For a parallel-plate capacitor:
ε = κεo = permittivity of the material.
Properties of Dielectric Materials
• Dielectric strength is the maximum electric field that a
dielectric can withstand without becoming a conductor.
• Dielectric materials
– increase capacitance.
– increase electric breakdown potential of capacitors.
– provide mechanical support.

Dielectric Dielectric
Material
Constant κ Strength (V/m)
air 1.0006 3 x 106
paper 3.7 15 x 106
mica 7 150 x 106
strontium titanate 300 8 x 106
Practice Quiz
• A charge Q is initially placed on a parallel-plate
capacitor with an air gap between the electrodes,
then the capacitor is electrically isolated.
• A sheet of paper is then inserted between the
capacitor plates.
• What happens to:
a) the capacitance?
b) the charge on the capacitor?
c) the potential difference between the plates?
d) the energy stored in the capacitor?
Capacitors in Parallel
Q = Q1 + Q2 + Q3
= C1V + C2V + C3V
= (C1 + C2 + C3 )V
= CeqV
Capacitors in Parallel:
Ceq = C1 + C2 + C3 + ...
Capacitors in Series
V = V1 + V2 + V3
Q Q Q
= + +
C1 C2 C3
 1 1 1 
= Q + + 
 C1 C2 C3 
Q
=
Ceq
1 1 1 1
For n capacitors = + + + ...
in series: Ceq C1 C2 C3
Circuit with Capacitors in Series and
Parallel
C1 C2
15 μF 3 μF C4
20 μF
a b

6 μF
C3
?

Cab
What is the effective capacitance Cab between points a and b?
Time constant
• Product of
– Capacitance of the capacitor being charged
– Resistance of the charging circuit
– CR
• Symbol τ ‘Tau’
• Unit seconds

Q V
CR = ×
V Q ÷t
CR = t
When t equals tau during discharge
−t
Q = Q0 e RC • At t = tau the capacitor
has fallen to 37% of its
original value.
− RC • By a similar analysis tau
Q = Q0 e RC can be considered to be
the time taken for the
capacitor to reach 63% of
−1
Q = Q0 e full charge.

Q = Q0 × 0.37
Graphical determination of tau
• V at 37% V
• Q at 37% or
• Compared to initial Q
maximum discharge

t =τ
t = RC
C= t t
R
Logarithmic discharge analysis
−t
• Mathematical
consideration of discharge
V = V0 e RC

• Exponential relationship
V −t
• Taking natural logs = e RC
equates expression to
‘y=mx+c’
V0
ln V − ln V0 = − t
• Gradient is -1/Tau

RC
−1
ln V = t + ln V0
RC
Logarithmic discharge graph

lnV

Gradient term
is the -1/Tau

t
www.search for...
• Capacitors

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