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Grade 12 U4

1. Electrostatics is the study of electric charges at rest. Charges can be transferred to objects via rubbing, touching, or electrostatic induction, resulting in either a positive or negative charge. 2. Coulomb's law describes the electrostatic force of interaction between two point charges. The force is directly proportional to the product of the charges and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them. 3. Electric potential is defined as the work required per unit charge to move a charge from a reference point to its current position. Equipotentials are surfaces of constant potential, with electric field lines perpendicular to equipotential surfaces.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
60 views

Grade 12 U4

1. Electrostatics is the study of electric charges at rest. Charges can be transferred to objects via rubbing, touching, or electrostatic induction, resulting in either a positive or negative charge. 2. Coulomb's law describes the electrostatic force of interaction between two point charges. The force is directly proportional to the product of the charges and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them. 3. Electric potential is defined as the work required per unit charge to move a charge from a reference point to its current position. Equipotentials are surfaces of constant potential, with electric field lines perpendicular to equipotential surfaces.
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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UNIT

UNIT44: : ELECTROSTATICS
ELECTROSTATICS
· General:
The study of electric charges at rest is called electrostatics.
atom: Np+ = Ne-  Qnet = 0 Atom is electrically neutral.

Charging methods: rubbing, touching (sharing or conduction), and


electrostatic induction

Glass rubbed with silk becomes +vely charged !


Rubber rubbed with rug becomes –vely charged!
Reference
objects:
4.1 Electric Charge and Coulomb’s Law
 Electric fields:
 1e = 1.6 x 10 – 19C
Types of el. charge: +ve and -ve
proton: Q p+ = +1e e = elementary charge
electron: Q e- = - 1e,
 Q  = C, e, esu, …
 1C = 6 250 000 000 000 000 000 e
The space around an electrically charged object is called an
el. field.
El. fields are represented by drawing el field lines.
El. field lines are drawn by following a test charge in an el.
field. A test charge is a tiny +vely charged body.
+ve charge outward and -ve charge inward to the neucleous
b
. Direction: el. field lines are drawn from a + ve charge
towards a – ve charge.
lines of electric flux
. El. field lines do not cross each other.
el. lines of force or
. Close lines show strong fields;
and diverging and far apart lines show weak fields!
Neutral point:
It is possible for two, or more, el. fields to cancel each
other out and create a neutral point. Here, the resultant
field strength is zero. El. field lines or

 el. field strength:


Definition: E = Fel/qo   E  = N/C, …
 The electrostatic force exerted on any charge Q becomes:
Fel = Q.E

Exercise 1: An e- experiences a force of 4pN when passing


through an electric field. Determine the el.
emnetteetrength exerted on it.
 Charge movement:
In an el. field, p+ and e- are accelerated in OPPOSITE
directions.
Fig. A force, F, is
exerted in the
direction of the field.
A particle enters perpendicularly :
Thus its vY is NOT affected.

F = q.E =const. and F = ma


 a = qE/m
WHY?
Time taken to cross field: v2x = d/t  t = d/v2x = d/v1; v2x= v1
=const
From v2Y = a.t, v2Y = (qE/m). d/v1 Y tan = v2Y/v2x
 = qEd/mv12
v2
X
Exercise 2: An e- enters a uniform el. field of strength
4.8 x 108N/C at 4000 m/s horizontally.
Find the Calculate the electrostatic force

exerted on it at points A and B.

Solution: FA = FB = Motion
qE = … of the electron is like a projectile motion.
· Coulomb’s law:
F12 = F21 = Fel
K.Q1.Q2
Fel =
r2
K = ¼o= 9 x 109Nm2/C2
o= 8.85 x 10 – 12 F/m permittivity of
vacuum
It is a measure of how easy it is for an electric field to be set up in vacuum.

material > o  always

 E is independent of the charge of a test charge in E = F/qo


 Coulomb’s law holds only for point charges.

Fel >> FG, in our day to day activities!
 multiple charges:
All charged particles exert forces on each other.
Exercise 3: Three point charges are paced along a line. Find
the total electrostatic
force exerted on the
4-C charge by the
other two point charges.
Solution: F23  F13 Fig. FBD of Q3
Q3 and the forces
acting on it.
 Experimental verification of Coulomb’s law: See p. 151

 Gauss’s law:
Definition: electric flux () = EA = E.A.cos
 = V.m, …
A = An

The total el. flux enclosed in a Gaussian surface is:


 total = Q/o  Gauss’s law
Gaussian surface is a surface with
no holes or opening.
 A charged hollow metallic conductor:

. Charge resides only on


the outer surface!
. E inside = 0 for r < R.

. At the surface and beyond:


E  1/r 2
 E = K.Q/R2 at the surface

E = K.Q/ r 2 for r > R


Example: For a charged sphere, E A at every point!
  total = (K.Q/R2).4R2 = 4KQ = Q/o

Derive el. field strength of a point charge from: Coulomb’s law, or


Gauss’s law
 Electric field between two parallel plates:
Taking only one plate:
tot = Q/o = E.A  E = Q/A.o = /o
 = Q/A surface charge density

E = /o capacitor equation

Between the plates: E = V/d = const.


 E = V/m ( N/C), …
Exercise 4: Calculate the force acting on an e- as it passes
between the two plates of a capacitor
of p.d. 500V and a separation of 40mm.

Solution: V = 500V, d=0.4m, e-: q = 1.6x10-19C, F = ?

Exercise 5: In a CRT, an e- is accelerated to the anode through


a distance of 3.6cm by a uniform el. field of

1.6 x 105V/m. At the anode, it passes through a hole and moves


to the screen 24cm away. Calculate the speed of the e- with
which it strikes the screen.
( Hint: Between anode and screen E = 0, f = 0. )
 Electric dipole:
An el. dipole is an atom or molecule in
which the +ve and – ve charges seem
to be separated.

permanent dipole
el. dipole: induced dipole
Fig. A water
instantaneous dipole
molecule
Example: A water molecule is a permanent dipole

p = q.d el. dipole moment


  p  = C.m, …

Micro oven
 Millikan’s oil-drop experiment: ( See p.157 )
It helped to determine the charge on an e-.
“e/m “ uniquely identifies a particle.
 Stokes’ law:
F = 6vr  force exerted on a spherical object of
radius r moving at a speed v through a liquid
of viscosity .
Millikan applied this law to determine the charges on oil drops:
At v terminal: F = mg = 6vterr;  = air viscosity
When an oil drop is stationary, mg = Q.E. …
4.2 Electric Potential
 el. absolute potential (V):

r 
A

Q Definition: VA= WA/ qo


The absolute
K.Q el. potential
 VA= r at point A

 V = J/C (  V ), …  1V = 1J/C


When W = +ve, a transported particle gains EPE,
W = -ve, a transported particle loses EPE.
 electric p.d. (V):
W BA
 
Q
A B

Definition:
el. p.d. ( voltage) VBA = WBA / qo

 VBA = (W A – W B )/qo = VA – VB
= K.Q ( 1/rA – 1/rB )
 The potential around a single point charge:
24cm
8cm A B
 
1800V 600V lower potential
16nC
higher potential

24cm
8cm
Exercise 6: a) How does an electron move in an electric field?
b) How does a proton move in an electric field?
Ans: a) An electron travels from a lower potential to a higher
potential always!
b) …
 Equipotentials:
An equipotential is a line ( in 2D space ), or a surface
( in 3D space ), joining points of equal potential.
N.B.:  El. field lines are perpendicular to an equipotential

surface.
. W = 0 along an equipotential surface.
 In a uniform el. field, equipotential lines, or surfaces,
are parallel.
 The equipotential surfaces of a point charge are
concentric spherical shells.
 In a given el. field, closer lines indicate higher p.d.
 Equipotentials in radial fields :
 Complex fields:
 Measuring equipotential: See on p.167
 E and V:
a) In a non-uniform el. field:
W F
V= q E= q
o o

r  E = (K.Q/r2) r = E.r
V = K.Q/r and E = K.Q/r2
 E = V/r For a point charge

b) In a uniform el. field:


VBA = WBA /qo = E.d
VBA = E.d
 Potential gradient:
E = V/r For the same ‘r’ if V is small
 weak field
and if V is large  strong field !
V/V

. The slope of the tangent represents the el.


field strength at that point ( from a point
charge at point o ).
. Near the charge,
r/m both E & V rise.
0

Fig. V – r graph of a point charge +ve charge ( radial field )


V = K.Q x 1/r
 el. potential energy ( EPE ):
For a system of point charges, EPE is the work done to
produce some configuration of the system of point charges.
W = q.V  EPE = W = q.V

 In a radial field:

This is the EPE of the


Fig.1 EPE = K.Q.q
r system of the two
point charges, or
also, it is the EPE of one of the charges in the el. field of the
other charge!
Fig.2 A system of three point
charges:
The EPE of the system is
 EPE in a uniform el. field:
Fig.3 A uniform field: E = const.
WBA = qo.VBA = EPE of ‘qo’.

= Fel.sBA =qo.E. sBA

 VBA = E. sBA

Equipotential surfaces are perpendicular


to el. field lines. Distances are measured
from the –ve plate, or 0V.
· Change of EPE:

W BA V = VA – VB = p.d.
  ( change of el. potential )
Q
A B
= K.Q( 1/rA – 1/rB ) =
= K.Q. r/r2 for r 0.
and also V = WBA/qo  WBA = qo.V
=  EPE
= EPE A – EPE B
= UA – U B
= U
 The law of conservation of EM:
An e- loses EPE as it moves nearer to a +vely charged
sphere.
When the e-, or any other charged particle, moves in an
el. field, EM = const.  EM = EP + EK = const.
 EPi + EKi = EPf + EKf   EK = - EP
 When EK , EP , or vice versa!
Exercise 7: Determine the change in the EPE of an e- when
it moves from a point 1 ( r1 = 10cm ) to another
point 2 ( r2 = 2cm ) in the el. field of a charged sphere of
0.05mC.
Solution: EPE = K.Q.qe( 1/r2 – 1/r1 )
= KQqe (1/2cm – 1/10cm)
e- =K.Qqe ( 4/10cm )

= 9x109x0.05x10-6x(- 1.6 x 10-19 ) x 4/10-2 = – 2.88x10 – 14J

Show that the e- would gain EPE if it is taken from point 2


to point 1 .
To which category of forces do ‘friction’ and other ‘contact
forces’, such as kicking a ball or pulling on a rope belong?
4.3 Capacitors and Dielectrics
 Capacitance:

 = emf of battery
V = p.d. between capacitor plates
The charging process lasts a very short
time. Charging stops when V = 

stored charge Q  V
 Q = C.V
 Capacitance C = Q/V
 C  = C/V (  F (farad )), …
 1F = 1C/V
capacitance Co = o.A/d in vacuum
C = .A/d with a dielectric
o = permittivity of vacuum
 = permittivity of dielectric

C/Co = .A/d = r relative permittivity


ova/d
( or dielectric constant )
r > 1  C > Co  C = r. o. A/d = r. Co
N.B.: . A capacitor breaks down beyond a certain voltage,
called breakdown voltage.
. ‘C’ depends only on plate area, plates separation, and
dielectric constant.
. A dielectric has a dielectric strength , this is a max. el.
field strength that it can withstand without breaking down.
( Beyond this critical el. field strength, the dielectric breaks
down, and C = 0.  Conducting capacitor. )
. Q
Fig. Q – V graph of a capacitor:
slope = C
(WHY?)
V area = W (stored energy)

. When a capacitor breaks down, charge leaks across the


plates of the capacitor.
Exercise 8: A capacitor stores 1.5mC of charge when it is
connected to a 60-V battery. Calculate its ‘C’.
Solution: Q = 1.5mC, V = 60V, C = ?

Exercise 9: If the break-down voltage of the capacitor in Ex.8


above is 120V, what is the ‘C’ of the capacitor at
90V? How much charge does it store at this voltage?
Solution: VB= 120V, at V = 90V, C =? and Q = ?
. How are capacitors constructed?
. p. 176 Gauss’s law and capacitance:
. A dielectric contains el. dipoles
 Combining capacitors –
 in parallel:
1.) V1= V2 = V3 = VR

2.) Q1 + Q2 + Q3 = QR

3.) C1.V + C2.V + C3.V = CR.V

 CR = C 1 + C 2 + C 3
 In series:
1.) V1+V2+V3 = VR
2.) Q1= Q2= Q3 = QR
3.) Q/C1+ Q/C2+ Q/C3=Q/CR

 1/CR = 1/C1 + 1/C2 + 1/C3

Exercise 10:
a) CT = ?
 b) Q1, Q2, Q3 = ?
  c) V1, V2, V3 = ?

 Energy stored in a capacitor:

Energy stored
 W = ½ Q.V in a capacitor

with C = Q/V, we also get:


W = ½ C.V2, or W = ½ Q2/C

 El. energy density ( u ): with


u=
W  u  = J/m 3
, …
volume (V) V/d = E
½ C.V2 ½ r. o. (A/d).V2
u= = = ½ r. o.E2
A.d A.d
 u = ½ r. o.E2
 Discharging a capacitor:
‘S’ closed, cap. charges:
Q = C.V
‘S’ opened, cur. flows
through R, cap. is discharging :
I = V/R
( instantaneous cur. )
Also, at any instant:
C = Q/V
I = - Q/t because charge decreases with time !

V/R = - dQ/dt  Q/C.R = - dQ/dt  - dQ/Q = dt/C.R  …


 Then, with Q = C.V and Qo = C.Vo :
 Substitute V = I.R and Vo = Io.R:

All Q, I, and V vary in the same manner.
The product ‘R.C’ has the characteristics of time.
 R.C =  is called a time constant .
When t = 1, it is called ‘ one time constant’ , etc.
Do you see that after t=1 only 37.8% of the total charge is
remains on the capacitor?
The time taken for Q = ½ Qo is called half-time: t1/2 = 0.69.

Do you see that within ‘2’ 86.5% of the charge on a capacitor is gone?
Now, it is considered almost empty.
Exercise 11: A 20-F capacitor is discharged through a
40-k resistor. How long will it take for the p.d.
across the capacitor to fall to 25% of its initial value?
Solution: C = 20F, R = 40k, V/Vo = 25% = 0.25; t = ?
Starting from V = Vo.e – t/R.C  V/Vo = 0.25 = e – t/R.C
– t/R.C = ln0.25 = - 1.386  t = 1.386 x R.C
= 1.386x4x104 x2x10 – 5F
= 1.1 s
 Charging a capacitor:
As the capacitor charges, I & Q change,
while ‘’ and ‘C’ do NOT change.
 = V C + VR I = dQ/dt
  = Q/C + I.R
V = I.R
Now, if we differentiate , we get:
d/dt = 0 = 1/C x dQ/dt + R.dI/dt
0 = 1/R.C x dQ/dt + dI/dt.
Since dQ/dt = I 0 = (1/R.C)x I + dI/dt
I = V/R
 dI/I = – dt/R.C,  I = Io.e – 1/R.C Io = Vo/R
 VR = Vo. e – 1/R.C VC =  - VR and Vo =  ,

 VC = (1 – e – 1/R.C) VC = Q/C Q = Qo(1 – e – 1/R.C )


 = Q /C
* graphs during charging:
 Uses of capacitors:
- smoothing circuits,
- filter circuits,
- tuning circuits,
- preventing sparking, etc.

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