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Today 3/26. Capacitors Circuits Lab questions? HW: 3/26 “Circuits 1” Due Friday 3/28. Capacitors. Capacitance tells me how many coulombs of charge are stored in a capacitor when it has 1 Volt across it.
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Today 3/26 • Capacitors • Circuits • Lab questions? • HW: 3/26 “Circuits 1” Due Friday 3/28
Capacitors Capacitance tells me how many coulombs of charge are stored in a capacitor when it has 1 Volt across it. A 25F capacitor will have 25C of charge on it when it has 1 volt across it. Think of capacitance as “coulombs per volt”. Units: coulombs per volt or “Farads”Equation: C = q/V
Capacitors Think of storing propane in a tank. The amount of propane depends on the pressure just as the amount of charge depends on voltage. We will use parallel plate capacitors so that all ideas from parallel plates apply. V = Ed E = /o (two plates) = Q/A
6F 6F Capacitors How much charge is on the capacitor? Think “6x10-6 Coulombs per Volt and you won’t need the equation! 72x10-6 C or 72C 12 V
6F 6F Capacitors What is the E-field inside the capacitor if the plates have an area of 1 m2? Note that capacitance depends on the area and separation distance Q = 72x10-6 C or 72C E = /o = 8.2x106 N/C What is the distance between the plates? V = Ed d = 12/8.2x106 = 1.5x10-6 m 12 V
6F Capacitors and Energy How many Joules of energy are stored in the capacitor? Ask yourself, “How much work must be done to charge the plates?” 12 V
6F Capacitors and Energy How many Joules of energy are stored in the capacitor? As the battery moves charge from one plate to another, the potential difference increases from zero to 12 V. The average is 6 V and the energy stored is q times 6 V (qVave). 12 V Energy = qVave = 1/2qV = 1/2CV2 C = q/V
Rank the bulbs from brightest to dimmest. Are any equally bright? D 1 A 2 B C 3 E A = B = C > D = E Play “Current Show” powerpoint presentation
Rank the bulbs from brightest to dimmest. Are any equally bright? D 1 A 2 B C 3 E Current is charge in motion, = “how many coulombs per second” pass by A = B = C > D = E Rank the bulbs for current. A = B = C > D = E Rank the batteries for current. 2 > 1 > 3
Rank the bulbs from brightest to dimmest. Are any equally bright? A A gets all the current while B and C each only get part so A is brightest. At the junction the current divides 50/50 since both branches have the same resistance. B C Rank the bulbs for current. A > B = C Rank the bulbs for brightness. More flow, more glow. A > B = C
Rank the bulbs from brightest to dimmest. Are any equally bright? Since branch D-E has mor R than branch F (extra something added in series) the current does not divide 50/50. D F E Current favors the path of least R. Beware of the words “takes the path…” as it implies none goes through D-E. Rank the bulbs for current. F > D = E Current for D = current for E as all that goes through D also goes through E. (See “Current Show.”) Rank the bulbs for brightness. F > D = E
Conceptual Circuits • More flow-more glow • What goes around, comes around • Current divides at junctions • Resistance inhibits current • add something in series = more R • add something in parallel = less R • Think in terms of “networks.”
Added in... Added in... Networks A D F B C E Which circuit has the least resistance and hence the greatest current through the battery? Series Parallel More R, less current through battery Less R, more current through battery
Rank for resistance A B C D E Compared to A, B and C have an extra clog on an existing path. Most R Least R B C A D E Compared to A, D and E have an extra path.