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Electromagnetic Fields and Waves: Lecture 8 - 10

This document discusses energy and potential in electromagnetic fields and waves. It defines electric potential difference as the work required to move a unit positive charge between two points in an electric field. The work done is calculated as the negative of the charge multiplied by the line integral of the electric field over the path between the points. Examples are provided to demonstrate calculating the work and potential for both uniform and non-uniform electric fields, including the cases of moving a charge near an infinite line charge. Differential path lengths are also defined in rectangular, cylindrical and spherical coordinate systems.

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Nabil Abdullah
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© © All Rights Reserved
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
86 views

Electromagnetic Fields and Waves: Lecture 8 - 10

This document discusses energy and potential in electromagnetic fields and waves. It defines electric potential difference as the work required to move a unit positive charge between two points in an electric field. The work done is calculated as the negative of the charge multiplied by the line integral of the electric field over the path between the points. Examples are provided to demonstrate calculating the work and potential for both uniform and non-uniform electric fields, including the cases of moving a charge near an infinite line charge. Differential path lengths are also defined in rectangular, cylindrical and spherical coordinate systems.

Uploaded by

Nabil Abdullah
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Electromagnetic Fields and Waves

Lecture 8 - 10

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec 8_9_10 /1


Engineering Electromagnetics

Chapter 4
Energy and Potential

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec 8_9_10 /2


Chapter 4 Energy and
Potential
Energy Expended in Moving a Point Charge in an Electric Field
◼ The electric field intensity was defined as the force on a unit
test charge at that point where we wish to find the value of the
electric field intensity.
◼ To move the test charge against the electric field, we have
o
t exert a force equal and opposite in magnitude to that
exerted by the field. ► We must expend energy or do work.
◼ To move the charge in the direction of the electric field, our
energy expenditure turns out to be negative. ► We do not do
the work, the field does.

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec 8_9_10 /3


Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

Energy Expended in Moving a Point Charge in an Electric Field


◼ Suppose we wish to move a charge Q a distance dL in an
electric field E, the force on Q arising from the electric field is:
FE  QE

◼ The component of this force in the direction dL which we


must overcome is:
FEL  FE  a L  QE  a L
◼ The force that we apply must be equal and opposite to the
force exerted by the field:
Fappl  QE  a L
◼ Differential work done by external source to Q is equal to:
dW  QE  aL dL  QE 
dL • If E and L are perpendicular, the
differential work will be zero
AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec 8_9_10 /4
Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

Energy Expended in Moving a Point Charge in an Electric Field


◼ The work required to move the charge a finite distance
is determined by integration:
final
W  dW
init

final
W  Q  E
init
dL
• The path must be specified beforehand
• The charge is assumed to be at rest at both initial
and final positions

• W > 0 means we expend energy or do work


• W < 0 means the field expends energy or do work

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec 8_9_10 /5


Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

The Line Integral


◼ The integral expression of previous equation is as
example of a line integral, taking the form of integral
along a prescribed path.
◼ Without using vector notation
we should have to write:
final
W  Q  ELdL
init

• EL: component of E along dL

◼ The work involved in moving a charge Q from B to A


is approximately:
W  Q(EL1L1  EL 2L2   EL6L6 )
W  Q(E1 L 1  E2 L 2   E6 L 6 )
AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec 8_9_10 /6
Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

The Line Integral


◼ If we assume that the electric field is uniform,
E1  E 2   E6
W  QE  (L1  L2   L6 )

◼ Therefore, L BA
W  QE 
(uniform E)
◼ LSince
BA the summation can be interpreted as a line integral,
the exact result for the uniform field can be obtained as:
A
W  Q  E 
B
dL
W  QE  A dL (uniform E)
B

W  QE  (uniform E) • For the case of uniform E, W
does not depend on the particular
LBA path selected along which
the charge is carried
AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec 8_9_10 /7
Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

The Line Integral


◼ Example
Given the nonuniform field E = yax + xay +2az, determine the
work expended in carrying 2 C from B(1,0,1) to A(0.8,0.6,1)
along the shorter arc of the circle x2 + y2 = 1, z = 1.

dL  dxax  dya y  dzaz • Differential path, rectangular


A coordinate
W  Q E
B
dL A
 Q  ( yax  xa y  2az )  (dxax   dzaz )
B
dya y 0.8 0.6 1
 2 ydx   xdy  2 2dz
1 0 1
2

• Circle equation: x 2  y 2  1
x  1 y 2
y 1 x2

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec 8_9_10 /8


Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

The Line Integral


0.8 0.6 1
W  2  1  x dx  
2
1  y dy 2  2dz
2
1 0 1
2 
1 
0.8 1 
0.6
x  y 1  y2
 2  1  x2  2 sin1 x1  2   2 sin1 y 
2 2 0

 0.962 J u a2  u2  a 2
 a  u du  2
2 2
1 u

◼ Example sin a
Redo the example, but use the straight-line path from B to 2 A.
• Line equation: y  y B  yA  y (x  x )  y  3x  3
B

x A  xB B

0.8 0.6 1
W  2  ydx   xdy  2 2dz
1 0 1
2
0.8 0.6
 2  (3x  3)dx   (1  )dy 
y
0 3
1 0
2
 0.962 J

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec 8_9_10 /9


Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

Differential Length
dL  dxax  dyay  dzaz Rectangular
dL  d a   ddza
 z a Cylindrical
dL  dr ar  r d a  r sin d Spherical
a

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec 8_9_10 /10


Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

Work and Path Near an Infinite Line Charge



E  E a  L

20
a
dL  d a  da 
dzaz
L
final
Case
W 1 Q init 2 1 a  1d a
final 
 Q  L
d a 
init 2
0 
0 a
Case 2
final L
W  Q  a   d 
init 2 0 a
b
 Q L d
20 
a

b
Q L ln
  2 a
0

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec 8_9_10 /11


Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

Definition of Potential Difference and Potential


◼ W e already find the expression for the work W done by an
external source in moving a charge Q from one point to another
in an electric field E:
final
W  Q  E
init
dL
◼ Potential difference V is defined as the work done by an
external source in moving a unit positive charge from one point
to another in an electric field:
final
Potential difference  V   E
init
dL
◼ W e shall now set an agreement on the direction of movement.
VAB signifies the potential difference between points A and B
and is the work done in moving the unit charge from B (last
named) to A (first named).

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec 8_9_10 /12


Chapter 4 Energy and
Potential
Definition of Potential Difference and Potential
◼ Potential difference is measured in joules per coulomb (J/C).
However, volt (V) is defined as a more common unit.
◼ The potential difference between points A and B is:
A
VAB   E  dL • V is positive if work is done in carrying
AB
B unit positive charge from B to A
V
◼ From the line-charge example, we found that the work done
in taking a charge Q from ρ = a to ρ = b was:
Q b
W   2ln
0
L

a ρ = b to ρ = a,
◼ Or, from
Q a Q b
W   2ln
L
0 b  ln
2 
L
0

◼ Thus,a the potential difference between points at ρ = a to


ρ = b is:
W L b
Vab  Q  2 ln a
0
AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec4 /13
Chapter 4 Energy and
Potential
Definition of Potential Difference and Potential
◼ It is often convenient to speak of potential, or absolute
potential, of a point rather than the potential difference
between two points.
◼ For this purpose, we must first specify the reference point that
we consider to have zero potential.
◼ T h e most universal zero reference point is “ground”, which
means the potential of the surface region of the earth.
◼ A n o t h e r widely used reference point is “infinity.”
◼ For cylindrical coordinate, in discussing a coaxial cable, the
outer conductor is selected as the zero reference for potential.

◼ If the potential at point A is VA and that at B is VB, then:

VAB  VA VB

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec4 /14


Chapter 4 Energy and
Potential
The Potential Field of a Point Charge
◼ In previous section we found an expression for the potential
difference between two points located at r = rA and r = rB in
the field of a point charge Q placed at the origin:
Q
VAB  1 1
  V A VB
4 0r A rB 
rA
V AB  r E 
B
dL
r
VAB   E r dr
A

rB

◼ Any initial and final values of θ or Φ will not affect the answe
r
As long as the radial distance between rA and rB is constant,
any complicated path between two points will not change the
results.
◼ This is because although dL has r, θ, and Φ components,
the field E only has the radial r component.
Dr. M. Tanseer
AIUB EMWF Lec4 /15
Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

Definition of Potential Difference and Potential


◼ For a point charge, we can find the potential difference
between points A and B at radial distance rA and rB, choosing
an origin at Q:
Q
E  Er a r  ar
4o r 2

dL  dra r
A
  E 
VAB B
dL r Q
 
A
dr
rB 4 2
0

Q r 1 1 
  • rB > r A V
AB > 0, AB
W >

4 0 r rA 0, Work expended by the
B
external source (us)
• rB < rA VAB < 0, WAB < 0,
Work done by the electric
field

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec4 /16


Chapter 4 Energy and
Potential
The Potential Field of a Point Charge
The potential difference between two points in the field of a
point charge depends only on the distance of each point from
the charge.
Thus, the simplest way to define a zero reference for potent ial
in this case is to let V = 0 at infinity.
As the point r = rB recedes to infinity, the potential at rA
becomes:
 VA 
VAB
VB
VAB  Q 1

Q
4 0 Ar 4 0 B
r1
VAB  Q 1 Q
 4
4 0 A 0
1
rQ
VAB  1 A
4 0 rA 
V

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec4 /17


Chapter 4 Energy and
Potential
The Potential Field of a Point Charge
◼ Generally,
Q
V
40r

◼ Physically, Q/4πε0r joules of work must be done in


carrying 1 coulomb charge from infinity to any point in a
distance of r meters from the charge Q.

◼ W e can also choose any point as a zero reference:


Q
V 
C 40r
1

with C1 may be selected so that V = 0 at any desired value of r.

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec4 /18


Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

Equipotential Surface
◼ Equipotential surface is a surface composed of all those
points having the same value of potential.

◼ No work is involved in moving a charge around on


an equipotential surface.

◼ The equipotential surfaces in the potential field of a


point charge are spheres centered at the point charge.

◼ The equipotential surfaces in the potential field of a line


charge are cylindrical surfaces axed at the line charge.

◼ The equipotential surfaces in the potential field of a sheet


of charge are surfaces parallel with the sheet of charge.

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec4 /19


Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

Potential Gradient
◼ W e have discussed two methods of determining potential:
directly from the electric field intensity by means of a line
integral, or from the basic charge distribution itself by a volume
integral.

◼ In practical problems, however, we rarely know E or ρv.

◼ Preliminary information is much more likely to consist a


description of two equipotential surface, and the goal is to find
the electric field intensity.

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec4 /20


Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

Potential Gradient
◼ The general line-integral
relationship between V and E is:
V   E  dL
dV  E  dL
◼ For a very short element of
length ΔL, E is essentially
constant:
V  E L
V  EL cos

◼ Assuming a conservative field, for a given reference and starting


point, the result of the integration is a function of the end point (x,y,z). We
may pass to the limit and obtain:
dV
dL E cos
AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec4 /21
Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

Potential Gradient
◼ From the last equation, the maximum positive increment of
potential, Δvmax, will occur when cosθ = –1, or ΔL points in
the direction opposite to E.
dV
E
dL max

◼ W e can now conclude two characteristics of the relationship


between E and V at any point:
1. The magnitude of E is given by the maximum value of the
rate of change of V with distance L.

2. This maximum value of V is obtained when the direction of


the distance increment is opposite to E.

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec4 /22


Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

Potential Gradient
◼ For the equipotential surfaces
below find the direction of E at P.

E
dV
,
dL max

 180

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec4 /23


Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

Potential Gradient
◼ Since the potential field information is more likely to be
determined first, let us describe the direction of ΔL (which leads
to a maximum increase in potential) in term of potential field.
◼ Let aN be a unit vector normal to the equipotential surface
and directed toward the higher potential.
◼ The electric field intensity is then expressed in terms of
the potential as:
E  E N E =  dL
dV N

a a
max

◼ The maximum magnitude occurs when ΔL is in the aN d irection.


Thus we define dN as incremental length in aN direction,
dV dV
dL max dN 

dV
E =  dN a N
AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec4 /24
Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

Potential Gradient
◼ W e know that the mathematical operation to find the rate
of change in a certain direction is called gradient.
◼ Now, the gradient of a scalar field T is defined as:
dT
Gradient of T  grad T  dN a N

◼ Using the new term


dV
E =  dN a N = grad V

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec4 /25


Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

Potential Gradient
◼ Since V is a function of x, y, and z, the total differential is
V V V
dV  dx  dy  dz
x y z
◼ But also,

dV  E  dL  E x dx  E y dy  Ez dz

◼ Both V
expression are true for any dx, dy, and dz. Thus:
Ex  
x  V x V y V z 
V E   a  y a  z a
Ey    x 
y
V V V
grad V  x a x  y a y  z a z
V
Ez  
z

◼ Note: Gradient of a scalar is a vect


or. AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec4 /26
Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

Potential Gradient
◼ Introducing the vector operator for gradien
t:   
  x ax  y ay  za z

We now can relate E and V as:


E  V

V V V Rectangular
V  x a x  y a y  z a z

V  1 V  Vz Cylindrical
V  a 
  a 
z
a
V 1 V 1 V  Spherical
V  r a  r 
r a  r sin  a

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec4 /27


Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

Potential Gradient
◼ Example
Given the potential field, V = 2x2y–5z, and a point P(–4,3,6),
find V, E, direction of E, D, and ρv.
V  2(4)2 (3)  5(6)  66 V
P

 V  V 
E  V    a x a y  V a z   4xya x  2x 2 a y  5az
 x y z 
E P  4(4) x  2(4) 2 ay  5az  48a x
 y  5a z V
(3)a 32a m
a E ,  EP
P EP
DP  0EP  425ax  283.3ay  44.27az pC m3

  div D  div  E  (8.8541012 )(4 y)  35.42 y pC m3


v 0

At P,  v 35.42(3) pC m3  106.26 pC m3
AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec4 /28
Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

The Dipole
◼ The dipole fields form the basis for the behavior of
dielectric materials in electric field.
◼ The dipole will be discussed now and will serve as an
illustration about the importance of the potential concept
presented previously.

◼ An electric dipole, or simply a dipole, is the name given to


two point charges of equal magnitude and opposite sign,
separated by a distance which is small compared to the
distance to the point P at which we want to know the electric
and potential fields.

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec4 /29


Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

The Dipole
◼ The distant point P is described by the spherical coordinates
r, θ and Φ = 90°.
◼ The positive and negative point charges have separation d
and described in rectangular coordinates (0,0, 0.5d) and (0,0,–
0.5d).

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec4 /30


Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

The Dipole
◼ The total potential at P can be written as
Q  1 1 Q R2  R1
V   4 R R
 
4 0  R R1 0 1 2

◼ The plane2 z = 0 is the locus of points for which R1 = R2


► The potential there is zero (as also all points at ∞).

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec4 /31


Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

The Dipole
◼ For a distant point, R1 ≈ R2 ≈ r, R2–R1 ≈ dcos 
Qd cos2
V 4r0

◼ Using the gradient in spherical c o o r d i n a t e


s,
E  V
 V r  1 V a   V  
   a r  r sin  a 
r 1
 Qd cos Qd sin 
E    ar 
 2r0 4r0 3 a 
3

Qd
E
40 r3 2 cos
a r  sin a θ

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec4 /32


Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

The Dipole
◼ To obtain a plot of the
potential field, we choose
Qd/(4πε0) = 1 and thus cosθ = r = 2.236
Vr2.
◼ The colored lines in the figure
below indicate equipotentials for
V = 0, +0.2, +0.4, +0.6, +0.8, r = 1.880
and +1.
Plane at
zero potential 45°

Qd cos
V
4r0 2
AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec4 /33
Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

The Dipole
◼ The potential field of the dipole may be simplified by
making use of the dipole moment.
◼ If the vector length directed from –Q to +Q is identified as
d, then the dipole moment is defined as Qd and is assigned
the symbol p.
p  Qd
◼ Since dar = d cosθ , we then have:
p
V
4ar
0
r 2
1 1
r  r • Dipole charges: 1  and E 
V
V p r r2
4r0  r2
r3
r • Point charge: 1 1
V  r and E  2
r

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec4 /34


Chapter 4 Energy and Potential

Practice Problems

AIUB Dr. M. Tanseer EMWF Lec 8_9_10 /35

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