Section 10 - Capacitors Flashcards
What is a capacitor?
- An electrical component made up of two conducting plates separated by a gap or a dielectric.
- Used to store opposing charges and therefore energy.
What is a dielectric?
An insulating material placed between the two plates of a capacitor.
What is the name of the most common type of capacitor?p
Parallel plate capacitor
What happens when a capacitor is connected to a power source (d.c.)?
• Positive and negative charges build up on opposite plates
• Uniform electric field is created between the plates
Potential difference builds up between the plates?
Why does potential difference build up between the plates on a capacitor?
Plates are separated by an electrical insulator, so no charge can move between them.
What is capacitance?
The charge stored per unit potential difference by a capacitor. quote formula
What is the symbol for capacitance?
C
What is the unit for capacitance?
Farad (F)
C = Q / V is found on the data sheet
what do the symbols stand for?
C = Q / V
Where:
• C = Capacitance (F)
• Q = Charge (C)
• V = Potential difference (V)
How many farads is a μF?
10^-6
How many farads is a nF?
10^-9
How many farads is a pF?
10^-12
What units are capacitance values usually in and why?
- From microfarads to picofarads
* Because a farad is a huge unit
What is the voltage rating of a capacitor?
The maximum potential difference that can be safely put across it.
How can a bucket represent a capacitor?
What is the relationship of Q and V?
Q is directly proportional to V.
How can use investigate the relationship with Q and V with a capacitor and variable resistor?
When investigating the relationship with Q and V, what does the graph of current against time look like?
How can you find the charge?
What does the graph of Q-V look like?
What is the gradient?
Straight line through origin.
Gradient is capacitance
How long do capacitors provide power for?
short amount of time
As capacitor discharges, what decreases?
Voltage through the circuit
Why are capacitors dangerous?
They can store charge until needed and then discharge all of their charge in a fraction of a second.
The capacitors contain enough charge to kill you
What are some examples of capacitors?
Camera flash.
Back-up power supplies - using ultracapacitors - reliable power for short periods of time.
Smoothing out variations in D.C. voltage supplies - capacitor absorbs the peaks and fills in the troughs.
What is permittivity?
A measure of how difficult it is to generate an electric field in a certain material.