1 / 15

Short Version : 23. Electrostatic Energy & Capacitors

Short Version : 23. Electrostatic Energy & Capacitors. 23.1. Electrostatic Energy. Electrostatic Energy = work done to assemble the charge configuration of a system. Reference ( 0 energy): when all component charges are widely separated. Bringing q 1 in place takes no work.

temima
Télécharger la présentation

Short Version : 23. Electrostatic Energy & Capacitors

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Short Version : 23. Electrostatic Energy & Capacitors

  2. 23.1. Electrostatic Energy Electrostatic Energy = work done to assemble the charge configuration of a system. Reference ( 0 energy): when all component charges are widely separated. Bringing q1 in place takes no work. Bringing in q2 takes Bringing in q3 takes Total electrostatic energy

  3. 23.2. Capacitors Capacitor: pair of conductors carrying equal but opposite charges. Usage: store electrical energy Parallel-Plate Capacitor: 2 conducting plates of area A separated by a small distance d . Plates are initially neutral. They’re charged by connecting to a battery. Charge transfer  plates are equal but oppositely charged. Large A, small d E  0 outside. Far from the edges

  4. Capacitance Parallel-plate capacitor:  C = Q / V = capacitance Parallel-plate capacitor See Probs 41 & 42 Practical capacitor ~ F ( 106 F) or pF ( 1012 F ) Charging / Discharging

  5. Energy Stored in Capacitors When potential difference between capacitor plates is V, work required to move charge dQ from  to + plate is E  dr < 0 Work required to charge the capacitor from 0 to V is = U = energy stored in capacitor Note: In a “charged” capacitor, Q is the charge on the + plate. The total charge of the capacitor is always zero.

  6. Example 23.1. Parallel-Plate Capacitor • A capacitor consists of two circular metal plates of radius R = 12 cm, separated by d = 5.0 mm. Find • Its capacitance, • the charge on the plates, and • the stored energy when the capacitor is connected to a 12-V battery. (a) (b) (c)

  7. Practical Capacitors Inexpensive capacitors: Thin plastic sandwiched between aluminum foils & rolled into cylinder. Electrolytic capacitors (large capacitance): Insulating layer developed by electrolysis. Capacitors in IC circuits (small capacitance): Alternating conductive & insulating layers.

  8. Dielectrics Dielectrics: insulators containing molecular dipoles but no free charges. Molecular dipoles aligned by E0 . Dielectric layer lowers V between capacitor plates by factor 1/ ( > 1).  = dielectric constant Dipole fields oppose E0. Net field reduced to E = E0 / . Hence V = V0 / . Q is unchanged, so C =C0.

  9. : 2 ~ 10 mostly Working voltage V = Max safe potential < Ebkd d

  10. Example 23.2. Which Capacitor? A 100-F capacitor has a working voltage of 20 V, while a 1.0-F capacitor is rated at 300 V. Which can store more charge? More energy?

  11. Connecting Capacitors Two ways to connect 2 electronic components: parallel & series Parallel: Same V for both components  Series: Same I (Q) for both components 

  12. Bursts of Power Capacitors deliver higher energy much more quickly than batteries. Flash light: Battery charges capacitor, which then discharges to give flash. San Francisco’s BART train: KE of deceleration stored as EE in ultracapacitor. Stored EE is used to accelerate train. Other examples: Defibrillator, controlled nuclear fusion, amusement park rides, hybrid cars, …

  13. 23.4. Energy in the Electric Field Charging a capacitor rearranges charges  energy stored in E Energy density = energy per unit volume Parallel-plate capacitor: Energy density : is universal

  14. Example 23.4. A Thunderstorm Typical electric fields in thunderstorms average around 105 V/m. Consider a cylindrical thundercloud with height 10 km and diameter 20 km, and assume a uniform electric field of 1105 V/m. Find the electric energy contained in this storm. ~ 1400 gallons of gasoline.

  15. Example 23.5. A Shrinking Sphere A sphere of radius R1 carries charge Q distributed uniformly over its surface. How much work does it take to compress the sphere to a smaller radius R2 ? Work need be done to shrink sphere Extra energy stored here

More Related