Title: I-7 Electric Energy Storage. Dielectrics.
1I-7 Electric Energy Storage. Dielectrics.
2Main Topics
- Electric Energy Storage.
- Inserting a Conductor into a Capacitor.
- Inserting a Dielectric into a Capacitor.
- Microscopic Description of Dielectrics
- Concluding Remarks to Electrostatics.
3Electric Energy Storage I
- We have to do work to charge a capacitor.
- This work is stored as a potential energy and all
(if neglecting the losses) can be used at later
time (e.g. faster to gain power). - If we do any changes to a charged capacitor we do
or the field does work. It has to be
distinguished whether the power source is
connected or not during the change.
4Electric Energy Storage II
- Charging a capacitor means to take a positive
charge from the negative electrode and move it to
the positive electrode or to take a negative
charge from the positive electrode and move it to
the negative electrode. - In both cases (we can take any path) we are doing
work against the field and thereby increasing its
potential energy. Charge should not physically
pass through the gap between the electrodes of
the capacitor!
5Electric Energy Storage III
- A capacitor with the capacitance C charged by the
charge Q or to the voltage V has the energy - Up Q2/2C CV2/2 QV/2
- The factor ½ in the formulas reveals higher
complexity then one might expect. By moving a
charge between the electrodes we also change Q, V
so we must integrate.
6Electric Energy Storage IV
- The energy density
- Let us have a parallel plate capacitor A,d,C,
charged to some voltage V -
- Since Ad is volume of the capacitor we can treat
?0E2/2 as the density of (potential) energy - In uniform field each volume contains the same
energy.
7Electric Energy Storage V
- In non-uniform fields energy has to be integrated
over volume elements where E is (approximately)
constant. - In the case of charged sphere these volumes would
be concentric spherical shells ( r gt ri )
8Electric Energy Storage VI
- Integrating from some R ? ri to infinity we get
- For R ri we get the same energy as from a
formula for spherical capacitor. - We can also see, for instance, that half of the
total energy is in the interval ri lt r lt 2ri or
99 of the total energy would be in the interval
ri lt r lt 99ri
9Inserting a Conductor Into a Capacitor I
- Let us insert a conductive slab of area A and
thickness ? lt d into the gap between the plates
of a parallel plate capacitor A,d, ?0,?. - The conductive slab contains enough free charge
to form on its edges a charge density ?p equal to
the original ?. So the original field is exactly
compensated in the slab. - Effectively the gap changed to d - ?.
10A Guiz
- Inserting a conductive slab of area A and
thickness ? lt d into the gap between the plates
of a parallel plate capacitor A,d, ?0,? will
increase its capacitance. - Where should we put the slab to maximize the
capacitance ? - A) next to one of the plates.
- B) to the plane of symmetry.
- C) it doesnt matter.
11C It doesnt matter !
- Let us insert the slab some distance x from the
left plate. Then we effectively have a serial
connection of two capacitors, both with the same
A. One has the gap x and the other d-x-?. So we
have -
12Inserting a Conductor Into a Capacitor II
- The capacitance has increased.
- In the case of disconnected power source the
charge is conserved and the energy decreases
the slab would be pulled in. - In the case of connected power source the voltage
is conserved and the energy increases we do
work to push the slab in and also the source does
work to put some more charge in.
13Inserting a Dielectric Into a Capacitor I
- Let us charge a capacitor, disconnect it from the
power source and measure the voltage across it.
When we insert a dielectric slab we shall notice
that - The voltage has dropped by a ratio K V0/V
- The slab was pulled in by the field
- We call K the dielectric constant or the relative
permitivity (?r) of the dielectric. - ?r depends on various qualities T, f!
14Inserting a Dielectric Into a Capacitor II
- What has happened Since the inserted plate is a
dielectric it contains no free charges to form a
charge density on its edges, which would be
sufficient to compensate the original field. - But the field orientates electric dipoles. That
effectively leads to induced surface charge
densities which weaken the original field and
thereby increase the capacitance.
15Inserting a Dielectric Into a Capacitor III
- The field orientates electric dipoles their
charges compensate everywhere except on the edges
next to the capacitor plates, where some charge
density ?p lt ? remains. - The field in the dielectric is then a
superposition of the field generated by the
original ? and the induced ?p charge densities. - In the case of homogeneous polarization the
induced charge density ?p P which is so called
polarization or the density of dipole moments.
16Inserting a Dielectric Into a Capacitor IV
- Inserting dielectrics is actually the most
effective way to increase the capacitance. Since
the electric field decreases, the absolute
breakdown charge increases. - Moreover for most dielectrics their breakdown
intensity (or dielectric strength) is higher than
that of air. They are better insulators!
17Energy Density in Dielectrics
- If we define the permitivity of a material as
- ? K?0 ?r?0
- and use it in all formulas where ?0 appears .
- For instance the energy density can be written as
?E2/2. - If dielectrics are non-linear or/and non-uniform
their description is considerably more
complicated!
18Capacitor Partly Filled with a Dielectrics
- If we neglect the effects near the edges of the
dielectrics, we can treat the system as a serial
or/and parallel combination of capacitors,
depending on the particular situation.
19Concluding Remarks To Electrostatics
- We have illustrated most of things on very
simplified examples. - Now we know relatively deeply all the important
qualitative principles of the whole
electrostatics. - This should help us to understand easier the
following parts ad well as functioning of any
device based on electrostatics!
20Homework
- The homework from yesterday is due tomorrow!
21Things to Read
- This lecture covers
- Chapter 24 4, 5, 6
- Advance reading
- Chapter 25 1, 2, 3, 5, 6
22Charging a Capacitor
- Let at some point of charging the capacitor C
have some voltage V(q) which depends on the
current charge q. To move a charge dq across V(q)
we do work dEp V(q)dq. So the total work to
reach the charge Q is
23Polarization ? Dipole Moment Density I
- Let us take some volume V which is small in the
macroscopic scale but large in the microscopic
scale so it is representative of the whole sample
24Polarization ? Induced Surface Charge Density II
- Let a single dipole moment p lq be confined in
a prism of the volume v al. A volume V of the
uniformly polarized dielectric is built of the
same prisms, so the polarization must be the same
as in any of them
25Polarization III
- The result field in the dielectric
We can express the original charge density
So the original field is distributed to the
result field and the polarization according to
the ability of the dielectric to be polarized.
26Polarization IV
- In linear dielectrics is proportional to the
result field . They are related by the
dielectric susceptibility ?
The result field E is K times weaker than the
original field E0 and can also define the
permitivity of a dielectric material as ?.