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Fun with Capacitors - Part II

Fun with Capacitors - Part II. This week. Wednesday Yell at you about the exam. Capacitors II Friday Finish Caps Start Current and Resistance Monday Quiz – Caps & Current (Through Friday’s stuff). Capacitor Circuits. A Thunker.

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Fun with Capacitors - Part II

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  1. Fun with Capacitors - Part II

  2. This week • Wednesday • Yell at you about the exam. • Capacitors II • Friday • Finish Caps • Start Current and Resistance • Monday • Quiz – Caps & Current (Through Friday’s stuff)

  3. Capacitor Circuits

  4. A Thunker If a drop of liquid has capacitance 1.00 pF, what is its radius?

  5. Anudder Thunker Find the equivalent capacitance between points a and b in the combination of capacitors shown in the figure. V(ab) same across each

  6. E=e0A/d +dq +q -q More on the Big C • We move a charge dq from the (-) plate to the (+) one. • The (-) plate becomes more (-) • The (+) plate becomes more (+). • dW=Fd=dq x E x d

  7. So…. Sorta like (1/2)mv2

  8. Parallel Plate Cylindrical Spherical Not All Capacitors are Created Equal

  9. Spherical Capacitor

  10. Calculate Potential Difference V (-) sign because E and ds are in OPPOSITE directions.

  11. Continuing… Lost (-) sign due to switch of limits.

  12. What's Happening? DIELECTRIC

  13. Polar Materials (Water)

  14. Apply an Electric Field Some LOCAL ordering Large Scale Ordering

  15. Adding things up.. - + Net effect REDUCES the field

  16. Non-Polar Material

  17. Non-Polar Material Effective Charge is REDUCED

  18. We can measure the C of a capacitor (later) C0 = Vacuum or air Value C = With dielectric in place C=kC0 (we show this later)

  19. How to Check This Charge to V0 and then disconnect from The battery. C0 V0 Connect the two together V C0 will lose some charge to the capacitor with the dielectric. We can measure V with a voltmeter (later).

  20. V Checking the idea.. Note: When two Capacitors are the same (No dielectric), then V=V0/2.

  21. Messing with Capacitors The battery means that the potential difference across the capacitor remains constant. For this case, we insert the dielectric but hold the voltage constant, q=CV since C  kC0 qk kC0V THE EXTRA CHARGE COMES FROM THE BATTERY! + V - + - + - + V - Remember – We hold V constant with the battery.

  22. Another Case • We charge the capacitor to a voltage V0. • We disconnect the battery. • We slip a dielectric in between the two plates. • We look at the voltage across the capacitor to see what happens.

  23. No Battery q0 + - + - q0 =C0Vo When the dielectric is inserted, no charge is added so the charge must be the same. V0 V qk

  24. Another Way to Think About This • There is an original charge q on the capacitor. • If you slide the dielectric into the capacitor, you are adding no additional STORED charge. Just moving some charge around in the dielectric material. • If you short the capacitors with your fingers, only the original charge on the capacitor can burn your fingers to a crisp! • The charge in q=CV must therefore be the free charge on the metal plates of the capacitor.

  25. ++++++++++++ q V0 ------------------ -q A Closer Look at this stuff.. Consider this virgin capacitor. No dielectric experience. Applied Voltage via a battery. C0

  26. ++++++++++++ q V0 ------------------ -q Remove the Battery The Voltage across the capacitor remains V0 q remains the same as well. The capacitor is fat (charged), dumb and happy.

  27. ++++++++++++ q - - - - - - - - -q’ +q’ V0 + + + + + + ------------------ -q Slip in a DielectricAlmost, but not quite, filling the space Gaussian Surface E E’ from induced charges E0

  28. A little sheet from the past.. -q’ +q’ - - - +++ -q q 0 2xEsheet 0

  29. Some more sheet…

  30. A Few slides backNo Battery q=C0Vo When the dielectric is inserted, no charge is added so the charge must be the same. q0 + - + - V0 V qk

  31. From this last equation

  32. + - Vo Another look

  33. Original Structure Disconnect Battery Slip in Dielectric Vo + - + - + - Add Dielectric to Capacitor V0 Note: Charge on plate does not change!

  34. so so si + si - + - What happens? Potential Difference is REDUCED by insertion of dielectric. Charge on plate is Unchanged! Capacitance increases by a factor of k as we showed previously

  35. SUMMARY OF RESULTS

  36. APPLICATION OF GAUSS’ LAW

  37. New Gauss for Dielectrics

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