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Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage
22

Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage.

Dec 13, 2015

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Page 1: Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage.

Chapter 22

Capacitance, Dielectrics,

Electric Energy Storage

Page 2: Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage.

Capacitors & capacitance

2

Capacitor / condenser: device that stores charge

For a given capacitor: Q ∝ V

Q

R

Q CV

C: Capacitance of capacitor

or Q

CV

+Q - QUnit: farad (F), μF & pF

Symbol in diagram:

Page 3: Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage.

Capacitors

3

Size, shape, relative position, insulating material

Capacitance depends on

Page 4: Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage.

Determine capacitance

4

For a parallel-plate capacitor:

+Q - Q

Sd

0 0

QE

S

0 0

d QdV Ed

S

(ignoring edge effect)

0 SQ

CV d

Page 5: Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage.

Cylindrical capacitor

5

Example1: A capacitor consists of two coaxial cylindrical shells (R1, R2), both with length

L>>R2. Calculate the capacitance.

L

R1R21 2

0

, 2

E R r Rr

2

1

212

0 1

ln2

R

R

RV Edr

R

0

12 2 1

2

ln( )

LQC

V R R

Page 6: Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage.

Spherical capacitor

6

Question: A capacitor consists of a sphere surrounded by a concentric spherical shell (R1, R2).

Calculate the capacitance.

Q2 Q1

R1

R2

- Q1 Q1+Q2

11 22

0

, 4

QE R r R

r

2

1

112

0 1 2

1 1( )

4

R

R

QV Edr

R R

0 1 2

12 2 1

4

R RQC

V R R

Page 7: Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage.

Capacitors in series and parallel

7

1) In series

1 2 ,Q Q Q

1C 2C

C1 2V V V

1 2

1 1 1 C C C

2) In parallel

1 2 ,V V V 1 2Q Q Q

1 2 C C C

1C

2C

C

Page 8: Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage.

Capacitor combination

8

Example2: Are the capacitors in series or parallel?

1)1C

2C

2)

Example3: How does C, Q, V change if d → 2d ?

1C 2C

V

d

parallel parallel

1C C Q

2V 1V

Page 9: Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage.

Electric energy storage

9

Charged capacitor stores electric energy

dW Vdq

+q - q

dq

21

2

q QW dq

C C

qdq

C

221 1 1

2 2 2

QU CV QV

C

Work required to store charges:

Energy stored:

Page 10: Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage.

Energy in the field

10

How does the electric energy distribute?

21

2U CV

Energy per unit volume / energy density:

201( )

2

SEd

d

20

1

2E Sd

20

1

2u E

Electric energy is stored in

the electric field!

d

S

Page 11: Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage.

Energy in capacitor

11

Example4: A parallel-plate capacitor is charged at 220V. (a) What is the capacitance; (b) how much electric energy can be stored?

d = 1mm

S =10cm2Solution: (a) 0 S

Cd

128.85 10 F

(b) Energy stored:

21

2U CV 72.14 10 J Maximum U ?

Page 12: Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage.

Different methods

12

Example5: Determine the electric energy stored in a spherical capacitor.

0 1 2

2 1

4 R RC

R R

Q R1

R2

- Q

Solution: 2 methods to solve it.

a) By using the capacitance:

Energy stored:21

2

QU

C

22 1

0 1 2

( )

8

Q R R

R R

Page 13: Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage.

13

20

1

2u E Q R1

R2

- Q

b) By using the energy density:

Total energy:

U udV2

0 1 2

1 1( )

8

Q

R R

20 2

0

1( )

2 4

Q

r

2

1

2 20 2

0

1( ) 4

2 4

R

R

Qr dr

r

22 1

0 1 2

( )

8

Q R R

R R

Discussion: Isolated conductor sphere? Q

Page 14: Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage.

Dielectrics

14

Insulating material in capacitors → dielectric

0 ,C KC

①Harder to break down → V ↗

②Distance between plates ↘

③ Increases the capacitance:

where K is the dielectric constant

Also noted as : relative permittivity r

Page 15: Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage.

Permittivity of material

15

If a dielectric is completely filled the space:

0C KC 0K S

d

S

d

: the permittivity of material

In a specific region filled with dielectric:

0K 0All in electric expressions →

00 0

QE

S

Q

ES

Page 16: Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage.

Electrostatics in dielectric

16

In a specific region filled with dielectric:

0 E

EK

field is reduced but not zero

The energy density in a dielectric: 21

2u E

Example6: How does C, Q, U change?

C Q U

CV battery disconnected?

Page 17: Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage.

Half filled dielectric

17

Question: How does the capacitance change if the capacitor is half filled with dielectric? (S, d, K)

1) 2)

Page 18: Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage.

Molecular description (1)

18

1) Polar dielectrics, such as H2O and CO

Have permanent electric dipole moments.

- +

p Ql

2) Nonpolar dielectrics, such as O2 and N2

No permanent electric dipole moments.

There are two different types of dielectrics:

Page 19: Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage.

Molecular description (2)

19

Polar Nonpolar

E

----

++++

Polarization

Bound chargeInduced field Eind

0 E

EK

Q -Q

indQ 1(1 )Q

K

Page 20: Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage.

Thinking & question

20

Thinking: Why charged objects can attract small paper scraps or water flow?

Question: Move a dielectric plate out of a charged capacitor, the electric energy increases, where does the extra energy come from?

CV

Page 21: Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage.

Brief review of Chapter 19-22

21

Coulomb’s law: 1 22

0

1

4

Q QF r

r

Gauss’s law: 0

= inE

QE dS

Electric potential: E V

aV E dl

Capacitance; Electric energy:

21,

2U CV 2

0

1

2u E

Dielectrics:

0

Page 22: Chapter 22 Capacitance, Dielectrics, Electric Energy Storage.

Chapter 23 & 24

22

Some useful concepts and equations:

These chapters should be studied by yourself

Ij

S

Ohm’s law: V = I R Current & resistance

Current density: I j dS

Microscopic statement of Ohm’s law:

/j E E

conductivity & resistivity

(ch23, pr.24)