6.1 Capacitors Flashcards
what is a capacitor?
a capacitor is a circuit component that stores energy by separating charges onto two electrical conductors (often called plates) with an insulator between them, one plate becomes positively charged and the other becomes negatively charged
what is the name of the insulating material between the plates of a capacitor?
dielectric
what is the circuit symbol for a capacitor?
two parallel lines connected with wires either side
how does a capacitor charge up? what happens to the voltage across the capacitor and the current when the capacitor is fully charged?
- when a capacitor is connected to a source of emf such as a cell, charge cannot flow between the plates of the capacitor
- electrons will be transferred from the negative terminal onto one plate, which becomes negatively charged and off the other plate, which becomes positively charged
- this results in a potential difference across he plates of the capacitor
- once the capacitor has become fully charged, no more charge will flow in the circuit, since the electrons on the negatively charged plate will repel any further electrons away
- at this point, the potential difference across the capacitor will be equal to the emf of the cell, there will also be no current
what is the definition of capacitance?
the capacitance, C, of a capacitor is defined as the quantity of charge. Q, which can be stored per unit p.d, V. across the plates of the capacitor
what is the definition of capacitance?
the capacitance, C, of a capacitor is defined as the quantity of charge. Q, which can be stored per unit p.d, V, across the plates of the capacitor
what is the unit of capacitance?
farads, F
why do we not use farads when stating the capacitance of capacitors?
a farad is a huge unit, so usually capacitance is usually expressed as micro-farads, more appropriate unit
what is the rule for combining capacitance in parallel?
Ct = C1 +C2 +C3
because voltage across all capacitors is the same as the cell and and the charge adds up to total
(opposite to resistors same as springs)
what is the rule for combining capacitance in series?
1 / Ct = 1 / C1 + 1 / C2 + 1 / C3
because every plate has the same magnitude of charge and the voltage adds up to total
(opposite to resistors same as springs)
what does the area under a voltage-charge graph represent?
the energy stored by the capacitor, or the work done by the battery to separate the charges on the two plates
what are the three equations for energy stored by a capacitor?
E = 0.5 x QV (from graph) E = 0.5 x CV^2 (from subbing Q = CV) E = 0.5 x Q^2 / C (from subbing in V = Q / C)
what are some common uses of capacitors?
-flash photography
-backup power supplies
-smoothing out p.d
(page 136)
what are the three exponential equations for charging a capacitor?
Q = Qf (1-e^-t/RC) V = Vf (1-e^-t/RC) I = Io x e^-t/RC
what are the three exponential equations for discharging a capacitor?
Q = Qo x e^-t/RC V = Vo x e^-t/R I = Io x e^-t/RC