Title: Capacitance
1Capacitance
2Electric Potential of Conductors
V2
V1
E0
E0
- The electric field E is zero within a conductor
at equilibrium.
3Electric Potential of Conductors
V2
V1
E0
E0
- The electric field E is zero within a conductor
at equilibrium. - Consequently the conductor has the same electric
potential V everywhere inside.
4Electric Potential of Conductors
V2
V1
E0
E0
- The electric field E is zero within a conductor
at equilibrium. - Consequently the conductor has the same electric
potential V everywhere inside.
5Electric Potential of Conductors
V2
V1
E0
E0
- The electric field E is zero within a conductor
at equilibrium. - Consequently the conductor has the same electric
potential V everywhere inside. - The electric potential depends on how much excess
charge has been added to the metal. The
relationship between these quantities defines the
capacitance.
6Capacitance
A capacitor consists of two pieces of metal
carrying equal and opposite charges Q and Q.
7Capacitance
A capacitor consists of two pieces of metal
carrying equal and opposite charges Q and
Q. An electric potential difference V develops
between the two pieces of metal.
8Capacitance
A capacitor consists of two pieces of metal
carrying equal and opposite charges Q and
Q. An electric potential difference V develops
between the two pieces of metal. It turns out
that Q and V are proportional. The constant of
proportionality is called the capacitance C.
9Capacitance
A capacitor consists of two pieces of metal
carrying equal and opposite charges Q and
Q. An electric potential difference V develops
between the two pieces of metal. It turns out
that Q and V are proportional. The constant of
proportionality is called the capacitance C.
Q CV Units Coulomb /Volt
Farad
10Capacitance
A capacitor consists of two pieces of metal
carrying equal and opposite charges Q and
Q. An electric potential difference V develops
between the two pieces of metal. It turns out
that Q and V are proportional. The constant of
proportionality is called the capacitance C.
Q CV Units Coulomb /Volt
Farad
The capacitance C depends on the size and shape
of the capacitor, and the material (if any)
between them.
11Parallel Plate Capacitor
A
d
-Q
Q
12Parallel Plate Capacitor
A
d
-Q
Q
The charge on the top and bottom plates attract
so that the it all ends up on the inner facing
surfaces. These have surface charge density ?s
with sQ/A.
13Parallel Plate Capacitor
A
d
-Q
E
Q
The charge on the top and bottom plates attract
so that the it all ends up on the inner facing
surfaces. These have surface charge density ?s
with sQ/A.
14Parallel Plate Capacitor
A
d
-Q
E
Q
The charge on the top and bottom plates attract
so that the it all ends up on the inner facing
surfaces. These have surface charge density ?s
with sQ/A. Gausss law
15Parallel Plate Capacitor
A
d
-Q
E
Q
The charge on the top and bottom plates attract
so that the it all ends up on the inner facing
surfaces. These have surface charge density ?s
with sQ/A. Gausss law
16Parallel Plate Capacitor
A
d
-Q
E
Q
The charge on the top and bottom plates attract
so that the it all ends up on the inner facing
surfaces. These have surface charge density ?s
with sQ/A. Gausss law gives EAQ/e0 so
EQ/e0A.
17Parallel Plate Capacitor
A
d
-Q
E
Q
The charge on the top and bottom plates attract
so that the it all ends up on the inner facing
surfaces. These have surface charge density ?s
with sQ/A. Gausss law gives EAQ/e0 so
EQ/e0A. The potential difference between the
two plates is ?V?Edl Ed or ?V Qd/e0A.
18Parallel Plate Capacitor
A
d
-Q
E
Q
The charge on the top and bottom plates attract
so that the it all ends up on the inner facing
surfaces. These have surface charge density ?s
with sQ/A. Gausss law gives EAQ/e0 so
EQ/e0A. The potential difference between the
two plates is ?V?Edl Ed or ?V
Qd/e0A. Turning this about gives Q (e0A/d)?V
i.e. QC?V with Ce0A/d.
19Parallel Plate Capacitor
A
d
-Q
E
Q
QC?V with C e0A/d The capacitance is like the
capacity of the object to hold charge. Bigger C
means the object can hold more charge (at a given
?V). The capacitance is proportional to the area
A (more capacity) and inversely proportional to
the separation d (smaller ?VEd for given Q).
20How Do You Get Q and -Q?
Q
-Q
21How Do You Get Q and -Q?
Q
-Q
Move Q from one plate to the other. How?
22How Do You Get Q and -Q?
Q
-Q
-
Move Q from one plate to the other. How? With a
gadget that pushes charge for instance, a
battery.
23How Do You Get Q and -Q?
Q
-Q
-
Move Q from one plate to the other. How? With a
gadget that pushes charge for instance, a
battery. Hooked to metal plates, a 1.5 Volt
battery moves charge until the potential
difference between the plates is also 1.5 V.
24How Do You Get Q and -Q?
Q
-Q
A battery is like a charge escalator. With just
a wire between the plates, the charges making up
Q would repel each other and run through the wire
to neutralize -Q. But the battery pushes the
charges uphill.
25Thinking About Capacitors
The black lines are metal wires attached to metal
rods. Suppose the battery has been hooked up
for a long time so that it has finished pushing
charge and the system has come to equilibrium.
2
1
6V
-
3
4
26Thinking About Capacitors
The black lines are metal wires attached to metal
rods. Suppose the battery has been hooked up
for a long time so that it has finished pushing
charge and the system has come to equilibrium.
2
1
6V
-
3
4
What is ?V12? What is ?V34? What is ?V23?
27Thinking About Capacitors
The black lines are metal wires attached to metal
rods. Suppose the battery has been hooked up
for a long time so that it has finished pushing
charge and the system has come to equilibrium.
2
1
6V
-
3
4
What is ?V12? Zero What is ?V34?
Zero What is ?V23? 6V
28More About Capacitors
2
1
Now hook the battery to a parallel plate
capacitor.
3
5
3 mm
6V
-
4
What is ?V12? What is ?V23? What is ?V34?
29More About Capacitors
2
1
Now hook the battery to a parallel plate
capacitor.
3
5
3 mm
6V
-
4
What is ?V12? Zero What is ?V23? Zero
What is ?V34? 6V
30More About Capacitors
2
1
Now hook the battery to a parallel plate
capacitor.
3
5
3 mm
6V
-
4
What is ?V12? Zero What is ?V23? Zero
What is ?V34? 6V What is E at point 5?
31More About Capacitors
2
1
Now hook the battery to a parallel plate
capacitor.
3
5
3 mm
6V
-
4
What is ?V12? Zero What is ?V23? Zero
What is ?V34? 6V What is E at point 5? E
6V/(3x10-3m) 2000 V/m
32More About Capacitors
2
1
3
Now suppose you pull the plates apart slightly
while keeping the battery attached. What happens
to ?V, Q, and E?
5
3 mm
6V
-
4
33More About Capacitors
2
1
3
Now suppose you pull the plates apart slightly
while keeping the battery attached. What happens
to ?V, Q, and E?
5
3 mm
6V
-
4
?V depends on the battery it stays at 6V.
34More About Capacitors
2
1
3
Now suppose you pull the plates apart slightly
while keeping the battery attached. What happens
to ?V, Q, and E?
5
3 mm
6V
-
4
?V depends on the battery it stays at 6V. Use
QC?V. Here Ce0A/d decreases so Q decreases.
35More About Capacitors
2
1
3
Now suppose you pull the plates apart slightly
while keeping the battery attached. What happens
to ?V, Q, and E?
5
3 mm
6V
-
4
?V depends on the battery it stays at 6V. Use
QC?V. Here Ce0A/d decreases so Q
decreases. E ?V / (new length) gets smaller.
36What Does a Capacitor Do?
- Stores electrical charge.
- Stores electrical energy.
Capacitors are used when a sudden release of
energy is needed (such as in a photographic
flash). Capacitors are basic elements of
electrical circuits both macroscopic (as discrete
elements) and microscopic (as parts of integrated
circuits).
37What Does a Capacitor Do?
- Stores electrical charge.
- Stores electrical energy.
The charge is easy to see. If a certain
potential, ?V, is applied to a capacitor C, it
must store a charge QC?V
(Symbol for a capacitor)
?V
38Energy Stored in a Capacitor
- Build the charge up a little at a time, letting
the charge q on the plate grow from 0 to Q.
39Energy Stored in a Capacitor
- Build the charge up a little at a time, letting
the charge q on the plate grow from 0 to Q. - When the charge is q the potential is Vq/C.
40Energy Stored in a Capacitor
- Build the charge up a little at a time, letting
the charge q on the plate grow from 0 to Q. - When the charge is q the potential is Vq/C.
- Now transfer a little more charge dq.
41Energy Stored in a Capacitor
- Build the charge up a little at a time, letting
the charge q on the plate grow from 0 to Q. - When the charge is q the potential is Vq/C.
- Now transfer a little more charge dq.
- This requires a work dW Vdq (1/C) q dq.
42Energy Stored in a Capacitor
- Build the charge up a little at a time, letting
the charge q on the plate grow from 0 to Q. - When the charge is q the potential is Vq/C.
- Now transfer a little more charge dq.
- This requires a work dW Vdq (1/C) q dq.
- Integrating q from 0 to Q gives the total stored
(potential) electric energy
43Energy Stored in a Capacitor
- Build the charge up a little at a time, letting
the charge q on the plate grow from 0 to Q. - When the charge is q the potential is Vq/C.
- Now transfer a little more charge dq.
- This requires a work dW Vdq (1/C) q dq.
- Integrating q from 0 to Q gives the total stored
(potential) electric energy
44Energy Density
Q -Q
?V
- Look at an energy density, i.e., energy per unit
volume. - For the parallel plate capacitor the volume is
Ad, so uE U/(Ad) (1/2 C?V2)/Ad - Now also use C e0A/d. Then
uE (e0/2)(?V/d)2 (e0/2)E2
45Energy Density
Q -Q
V
uE (e0/2)(?V/d)2 (e0/2)E2
- This leads to another way to understand the
energy. - We can think of the energy as stored in the
FIELD, rather than in the plates. - If an electric field exists, then you can
associate anelectric potential energy density of
(e0/2)E2.