Transient Currents Flashcards

1
Q

Explain capacitor charging in a resistor-capacitor circuit.

A

The instant the circuit is switched on there will be no charge in the capacitor and current will equal V/R. As time passes the capacitor will charge creating a voltage that opposes the source voltage. I=(V-vc)/R
After 5 RC seconds the vc will equal source voltage and there will be no current flow.

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2
Q

What factors affect the charging time of a capacitive circuit (time constant)

A

The time constant (τ) is the amount of time needed for the voltage from a capacitor in a resistor capacitor circuit to be charged up to a given percentage of the input voltage. It is determined by the capacitance value (farads) and the resistance of the circuit. High resistance and capacitance will mean longer charging times.
τ = CR

Voltage from the capacitor (vc) will always reach 63.2% of V in CR seconds.
A capacitor will reach steady state in about 5 × CR seconds

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3
Q

Explain time constants of capacitative discharge

A

Capacitors discharge in a pattern of exponential decay. A fully charged capacitor will discharge to (100-63.2 = 36.8 %) of Vs in τ (RC) seconds. In theory it takes forever to fully discharge but in practice a vc is close enough to zero for practical purposes after 5RC seconds.

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4
Q

What is the formula for induced emf

A
E = -L ∆i/∆t
E is emf measured in volts
L is inductance measured in henrys 
i is current 
t is time
The negative sign is because the induced emf will always oppose the current
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5
Q

What are henries used to measure

A

The inductance of a given inductor coil. This is determined by
-The number of turns of wire in the coil
-The material of the core
-The shape and size of the core
-The shape size and material of wires making up the coil
There is no precise formula for calculating inductance.

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6
Q

What is the relationship between current, voltage and time in a purely inductive circuit.

A

i = t V/L

Current equals time × voltage/ inductance

When the voltage is first applied the induced emf will oppose the source voltage. It will reach a steady state after 5L/C seconds.

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7
Q

What is the relationship between source voltage and induced emf in a purely inductive DC circuit.

A

When the current is increasing the induced emf will oppose the source voltage.
V= -Emf
The induced EMF can never be greater than the source voltage. When the current is decreasing the induced emf will try to maintain the source voltage.

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8
Q

Explain time constants of capacitative discharge

A

Capacitors discharge in a pattern of exponential decay. A fully charged capacitor will discharge to (100-63.2 = 36.8 %) of Vs in τ (RC) seconds. In theory it takes forever to fully discharge but in practice a vc is close enough to zero for practical purposes after 5RC seconds.

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9
Q

What is the difference between the time constant in an inductive and resistive circuit

A

In a capacitive circuit the time constant is τ=CR
In an inductive circuit τ= L/R
More resistance will increase the time constant in a capacitive circuit and decrease it in an inductive circuit

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10
Q

What is the difference between how inductors and capacitors store energy.

A

An inductor stores energy in a magnetic field

A capacitor stores energy in an electric field

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11
Q

Explain voltage across an inductor in a DC circuit

A

V = L ∆i/∆t
There is only a voltage across the inductor if the current is changing.
In the steady state phase there is zero voltage across a perfect inductor. In reality no inductor is perfect and thus every inductor has some resistance.

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12
Q

Explain how you calculate the current though an inductor in a DC circuit if you know the voltage and the inductance.

A

Voltage across an inductor is a derivative of current with respect to time. Hence current is an integral of voltage with respect to time.

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