Lecture 9 - Chapter 24 Part 2
Lecture 9 - Chapter 24 Part 2
Chapter 24
Series and parallel capacitors
Energy stored in capacitors
Dielectrics
Lecture 9 – February 9
Outline of chapter 24
New concepts
• Capacitor
• Capacitance
• Dielectrics
Summary so far
𝑞
𝐶= Definition of capacitance
Δ𝑉
• A continuous wire in a circuit diagram has the same potential at all points.
• By continuous I mean there is no other component interrupting the wire.
• This is an “ideal” wire.
Capacitors in Parallel
1. All capacitors in parallel have the same potential difference across each
of them
2. The total charge is equal to the sum of the charges.
Capacitors in Series
𝑉1 = 𝑉2 = 𝑉3 = 𝑉 𝑞 = 𝐶1 𝑉 + 𝐶2 𝑉 + 𝐶3 𝑉 = 𝑉(𝐶1 + 𝐶2 + 𝐶3 )
𝑞 = 𝑞1 + 𝑞2 + 𝑞3
𝑞 𝐶𝑒𝑞 = 𝐶1 + 𝐶2 + 𝐶3
𝐶𝑒𝑞 =
𝑉
Capacitors in Series
equivalent capacitance
𝑞1 𝑞2 𝑞3 1 1 1
𝑉= + + =𝑞 + +
𝑞1 = 𝑞2 = 𝑞3 = 𝑞 𝐶1 𝐶2 𝐶3 𝐶1 𝐶2 𝐶3
𝑉 = 𝑉1 + 𝑉2 + 𝑉3 𝑞 1 1 1 1
𝑉= = + +
𝐶𝑒𝑞 𝐶𝑒𝑞 𝐶1 𝐶2 𝐶3
24-1
1 1 1 1 2 3 1 9
+ = = + = =
12 6 Ceq 12 12 12 4
24-1
3 and 11 and 4 are in parallel.
3 + 11 + 4 = 18
3 11 4
9
24-1
Ceq = 6 F
Energy Storage in a Capacitor
• In order to charge the capacitor work must be done against the electric force.
• As more charge is pushed on the plates the potential energy of the capacitor
increases.
• The energy stored in the capacitor is electrical potential energy.
We can find the energy per unit volume of the capacitor (energy density, u):
𝜖0 𝐴
𝐶=
𝑑
1 𝜖0 𝐴 2
1
𝑈 = 𝐶 Δ𝑉 2 𝑈= 𝐸𝑑 = 𝜖0 (𝐴𝑑 )𝐸 2
2 𝑑 2
Δ𝑉 = 𝐸𝑑 ,
𝑈 1
𝑢= = 𝜖0 𝐸 2
𝑉𝑜𝑙𝑢𝑚𝑒 2
Capacitor with a Dielectric
It serves 3 purposes:
1. It keeps the plates physically separated by a small amount;
2. It increases the capacitance;
3. It prevents electrical breakdown (sparks).
Capacitor with a Dielectric
The capacitance of a capacitor containing a dielectric increases by a
numerical factor , the dielectric constant of the material.
DV is constant
Q is constant
Capacitor with a Dielectric
• Q free is constant
• sfree is constant (area does not change)
• Efree produced by the free charge does not
change
Q is constant
• E decreases (E=Efree-Ebound)
• DV decreases (DV=Ed)
• Capacitance increases by a factor of K
𝑄2
• The energy stored decreases (𝑈 = )
2𝐶
𝜎𝑓𝑟𝑒𝑒 − 𝜎𝑏𝑜𝑢𝑛𝑑 𝐸𝑓𝑟𝑒𝑒
𝐸 = 𝐸𝑓𝑟𝑒𝑒 − 𝐸𝑏𝑜𝑢𝑛𝑑 = =
𝜖0 𝜅
𝜅−1 1
𝜎𝑏𝑜𝑢𝑛𝑑 = 𝜎𝑓𝑟𝑒𝑒 = 1 − 𝜎
𝜅 𝜅 𝑓𝑟𝑒𝑒
Capacitor with a Dielectric
𝑄 Δ𝑉0
Δ𝑉 = =
𝜅𝐶0 𝜅
1 𝑈0 Q is constant
𝑈 = 𝑄Δ𝑉 =
2 𝜅
• The potential energy of the field decreases – the field is doing work on the
dielectric slab.
• The slab is pulled between the plates by the electric force.
Capacitor with a Dielectric
2. Dielectric inserted between the plates of a capacitor connected to
a battery
• DV stays the same
• E does not change (DV=Ed)
𝜎
• s does not change (𝐸 = ) – net charge
𝜖0
DV is constant
• Capacitance increases by a factor of K
• Qfree increases – more charge is pushed by
the battery onto the plates.
• The energy stored increases
𝑄𝑓𝑟𝑒𝑒 = Δ𝑉 ⋅ 𝐶 = Δ𝑉 𝜅𝐶0 = 𝜅𝑄𝑓𝑟𝑒𝑒
0
1 1
𝑈 = 𝑄Δ𝑉 = 𝜅𝑄0 Δ𝑉 = 𝜅𝑈0
2 2
The battery does work on the extra charge moved to the plates. This increases
the energy stored in the capacitors.
Dielectric slab pulled between the plates
Electric breakdown field
The maximum electric field the dielectric can stand
without a spark going through it.
Electric Field for breakdown is typically 107 V/m (or 104
V/mm or 10 kV/mm)
𝑄
𝑉𝑠𝑝ℎ𝑒𝑟𝑒 =
4𝜋𝜖0 𝑅
𝑄
𝐶= = 4𝜋𝜖0 𝑅
𝑉
R C [F]
1 cm 1 pF
1m 100 pF
6.4 x 106 m (radius of the Earth) 0.71 mF