Capacitance Flashcards

1
Q

Define Capacitance

A

The charge stored (Q) by a capacitor per unit potential difference

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2
Q

How does a capacitor cause a uniform electric field

A

When 2 parallel metal plates are connected to a battery, (-ve) electrons from the battery go to one plate, making it (-ve) Then electrons leave the other plate and go to the battery making that plate (+ve) Opposite charges building up on the 2 parallel plates cause the field between them

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3
Q

What is a capacitor

A

An electrical component that stores charge Made up of 2 conducting parallel plates with a gap in between that may have a dielectric in

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4
Q

What is a dielectric

A

An insulating material that can be put between 2 conducting parallel plates to increase the ability of the capacitor to store charge

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5
Q

Define permittivity

A

Measure of the ability to store an electric field in the material

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6
Q

What does it mean for a capacitor to store charge

A

One conductor stores charge Q+ (Electrons that left it to go to the battery) and one conductor stores charge Q- (Electrons that came to it from the battery)

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7
Q

How does a dielectric increase the ability of a capacitor to store charge

A

When placed between the 2 plates, molecules in the dielectric become polarised.

So the side facing the positive plate becomes negatively charged, repelling more electrons from the positive plate, making it more positively charged.

The side facing the negative plate becomes positively charged, attracting more electrons to the negative plate, making it more negatively charged

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8
Q

What does it mean for molecules in a dielectric to become polarised

A

Dielectrics have polar molecules - one side positive, one side negative.

In no electric field, they are arranged in random directions

But in an electric field, they align themselves with the field

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9
Q

What is relative Permittivity Σr

How do you calculate it

A

Ratio of charged stored with the dielectric to charge stored without the dielectric

Q/Q0

Q0 - Charge stored without dielectric

OR

C/C0

C0 - Capacitance without dielectric

OR

Ratio of permittivity of dielectric to permittivity of free space

Σr=Σ/Σ0

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10
Q

How to calculate the capacitance of a capacitor with a dielectric in it

A

C = (Aεr ε0 )/d

εr ε0 = Permittivity of dielectric

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11
Q

How can one increase the capacitance of a capacitor that has a dielectric

A

Making the area of each plate larger

Decreasing the spacing of plates

Filling space with a dielectric with a large permittivty

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12
Q

What does a µ represent

A

x10-6

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13
Q

Why does a capacitor store energy

What form is this energy stored as

A

As work is done to force electrons onto 1 plate and off the other

Electric Potential Energy

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14
Q

How does potential difference across a capacitor change with charge stored

A

As potential difference is the energy per coulomb

P.d across a capacitor increases proportionally to the charge stored

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15
Q

What does the area under a Q-V graph represent

A

Energy stored in a capacitor

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16
Q

How to charge a capacitor

A

Connect it in a circuit with a power supply and resistor

17
Q

I-t graph for a charging capacitor and its equation

A

I=I0e-(t/RC)

18
Q

V-t graph for a charging capacitor and its equation

A

V=V0(1-e-(t/RC))

19
Q

Q-t graph for a charging capacitor and its equation

What does the gradient represent

A

Current

Q=Q0(1-e-(t/RC))

20
Q

Describe what happens when a capacitor is charging up

A

Current starts to flow and negative charge builds up on the plate connected to the negative terminal. of the cell.

On the opposite plate, electrons are repelled by the negative charge building up on the other (now increasing negative) plate

Therefore these electrons move to the positive terminal of the cell and an equal but opposite charge is formed on each plate, creating a potential difference.

As the charge across the plates increases, the potential difference increases but the electron flow decreases due to the force of electrostatic repulsion also increasing, therefore current decreases and eventually reaches zero.

21
Q

How do you discharge a capacitor

A

Connect it to a closed circuit with just a resistor

22
Q

I-t graph for a discharging capacitor and its equation

A

I=I0e-(t/RC)

23
Q

V-t graph for a discharging capacitor and its equation

A

V=V0e-(t/RC)

24
Q

Q-t graph for a discharging capacitor

A

Q=Q0e-(t/RC)

25
Q

Why does current gradually decrease as a capacitor discharges

A

P.d across capacitor decreases gradually as it loses charge, V=IR

Also, the electrostatic force between electrons that repels them to each decreases as the number of electrons decreases

26
Q

How do you show that a quantity changes exponentially

A

Show that the amount that it changes by each time changes by the same factor each time

27
Q

Define the time constant

A

Time taken to discharge a capacitor to 37% of its initial charge

This value x5 gives you the time taken to (basically completely) discharge a capacitor to 99% of its original charge

28
Q

How to calculate the time constant

A

RC

Time when the value is 0.37xthe initial Current/Voltage/Charge for a discharging capacitor

Time when the value is 0.63xthe initial Current/Voltage/Charge for a charging capacitor

29
Q

How to calculate the time taken for Charge/Voltage/Current to half

A

Time constant x ln2

30
Q

What happens to the energy stored in a charged capacitor that isn’t connected to a circuit when a dielectric is removed from it

Why?

A

Energy stored increases

In dielectric, polar molecules align in the field with positive end toward the negative plate

Work is done on the capacitor separating the positive surface of the dielectric from the negative plate

31
Q

When a question asks for something when the ratio/% of charge/I/V to the original charge/I/V … is

eg. time taken for capacitor to discharge to 1% of its original charge

What is the best thing to do

A

Rearrange equations for charging/discharging

Q/Q0 = e-t/RC