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Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy
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Page 1: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy

Page 2: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Learning Objectives

• To introduce the concept of electric potential energy

• To define the electric potential

• To find and use the electric potential of point charges, charged spheres, and parallel-plate capacitors

• To understand charge and energy storage in a capacitor

Page 3: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Remember Work?

• In high school we learned that Work = force x displacement*

• Work is a scalar, unlike force and displacement, which are vectors.

• If the force and the displacement are in the same direction, the work is positive; if they are in opposite directions, the work is negative.

• The electric field generates a force that does work.

*way oversimplified

*oversimplified, but it will do for now

Page 4: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Question about WorkWhich of the following is true for the proton as it travels from

point A to point B? Blue arrow shows force on proton due to E field.

A. Work done on the charge is positive.

B. Work done on the charge is negative.

C. No work is done on the charge

Page 5: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Another Question about WorkWhich of the following is true for the electron as it

travels from point B to point A this time? Blue arrow shows force on electron due to E field.

A. Work done on the charge is positive.

B. Work done on the charge is negative.

C. No work is done on the charge.

Page 6: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

More about work

• When a conservative force does work, this work is defined as the change in potential energy of an object.

• Conservative forces include electric force, magnetic force, gravity, the spring force and the Tea Party. All other forces we deal with in this class are nonconservative.

Page 7: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

The change in potential energy

ΔPE = - Wconservative

As the weight goes up, its potential energy increases, so ΔPE is positive.

The gravitational force is doing negative work, since it’s direction (down) is opposite to that of the displacement(up)

Knight uses ΔU for the change in potential energy:

(ΔU = - Wconservative )

Page 8: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

The change in potential energy

ΔPE = - Wconservative

As the weight goes down, its potential energy decreases so ΔPE is negative.

The gravitational force is doing positive work, since it’s direction (down) is same as that of the displacement (down).

Page 9: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Question about ΔEPEWhich of the following is true for the electron as it

travels from point B to point A? Blue arrow shows force on electron due to E field.

A. ΔEPE is positive.

B. ΔEPE is negative.

C. EPE does not change.

Page 10: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Conservation of Energy

W nonconservative = ΔKE + ΔPE

Non-conservative forces that do work include pushes and pulls, friction, tension and the ACLU.

If no conservative forces do work on a system:

W nonconservative = ΔKE

If no nonconservative forces do work:

ΔKE + ΔPE = 0

Page 11: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Work and EPEA positive charge is moving

from point A to point B in the uniform electric field of a capacitor, as shown in the drawing. The electric force does __________ work on the charge and, as a consequence, its electric potential energy __________ .

A. positive, increases

B. positive, decreases

C. negative, decreases

D. negative, increases

Page 12: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

EPE and KE - 1A small, positively-charged

particle is shot toward a larger fixed charge, also positive. There are no non-conservative forces once the particle is released

What does the particle do?

A. speed up and gain EPE

B. slow down and gain EPE

C.speed up and lose EPE

D.slow down and lose EPE

fixed

Page 13: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

EPE and KE- 2

A small, positively-charged particle is shot toward a larger fixed charge, this time negative.

What does the particle do?

A. speed up and gain EPE

B. slow down and gain EPE

C.speed up and lose EPE

D.slow down and lose EPE

Page 14: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

The Electric Potential Model

• The source charges have altered the space around them to create an electric field (E).

• Any point in the E field has an electric potential (V) associated with it.

• A test charge q (blue) at that point has an EPE.

• V = EPE/q

Page 15: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

The Electric Potential Model• The charges of the capacitor

create a constant electric field E. • At point A, the electric potential

is VA and at point B, it is VB.

• The conservative electric field does positive work on +q0 as it moves from A to B.

• EPE decreases, so Δ EPE (EPEB

- EPEA) is negative

• VB is Iower (less) than VA .

Page 16: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

The Electric Potential Model

ΔEPE = q0VB - q0VA

ΔEPE/q0 = VB – VA = ΔVAB

ΔVAB is the electrical potential difference (or potential difference)

WAB /q0 = (- ΔVAB)

Page 17: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

19.2 The Electric Potential Difference

DEFINITION OF ELECTRIC POTENTIAL DIFFERENCE

The electric potential difference between 2 points is the change in electric potential energy experienced by a test charge as it moved between the 2 points, divided by the charge itself. The change in electric potential energy is the negative of the work done by the electric field when the charge moves between the 2 points

SI Unit of Electric Potential Difference: joule/coulomb = volt (V)

o

AB

o

A

o

BAB q

W

qqVV

EPEEPE

o

AB

o q

W

qV

EPE

Page 18: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

19.2 The Electric Potential Difference

DEFINITION OF ELECTRIC POTENTIALThe electric potential at a point is the electric potential energy of a small test charge divided by the charge itself:

oqV

EPE

SI Unit of Electric Potential: joule/coulomb = volt (V)

Recall that any value for a potential energy is based on an arbitrary zero . The same is true for the electric potential. Only the differences ΔEPE and ΔV can be measured absolutely in terms of the work done between 2 points.

Page 19: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Potential and Potential Energy

As the +1 nC charge moves toward the source charges, it gains 1 μJ of potential energy. The change in potential is:

A. 1 KV B. 1 μV C. 1 mV D. 1 nV

Page 20: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Sources of Electric Potential Difference

A potential difference is created by separating positive charge from negative charge.

Page 21: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Measuring Electric Potential Difference

• The voltmeter measures the potential difference (ΔV) between 2 points.

• Since it is the difference that is important, not the actual value, the black lead is 0 volts and the value read by the voltmeter is equal to (ΔV).

Page 22: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Work and potential differenceIn each of the cases below, the same +q0

moves from points A to B. In which case is the most work done by the electric field?

A.Case 1 C. Case 3

B.Case 2 D. All equal work

Page 23: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

19.4 Equipotential Surfaces and Their Relation to the Electric Field

An equipotential surface is a surface on which the electric potential is the same everywhere. For a point charge, this would be a spherical surface; all the places in space at a distance r from the charge.

r

kqV

The potential difference is related to the work done to move a test charge in an electric field The net electric force does no work on a test charge if that charge were moved along an equipotential surface.

Page 24: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

When looking at a 2 dimensional depiction of equipotential surfaces, they appear as lines (red lines in this picture). The green lines are electric field lines.

Page 25: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

• The equipotential lines tell us how much EPE a test charge of 1 C would have at that distance from the blue source charge. lines.• The field lines show the direction and the relative magnitude of the force that a positive test charge would experience at that distance from the blue source charge

Page 26: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

An electric dipole

Page 27: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

19.4 Equipotential Surfaces and Their Relation to the Electric Field

• The electric field lines created by any charge or group of charges is everywhere perpendicular to the associated equipotential surfaces or lines

• The electric field lines points in the direction of decreasing potential.

• One way to investigate the relationship between the electric field and the electric potential is with the parallel plate capacitor.

Page 28: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Parallel Plate CapacitorThe parallel plate capacitor

consists of 2 plates of area A,with equal and opposite charges (+q,-q) separated by a small distance, d.

The electric field, E inside this a capacitor is constant. It points from the positive plate to the negative plate, parallel to the force a positive test charge would experience.

The two plates act as equipotential surfaces.

Page 29: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Electric Potential of the Capacitor

The electric potential is the same anywhere on each (imaginary) equipotential surface, and decreases in the direction of the electric field.

A positive test charge would have the greatest EPE at the positive plate and the least EPE at the negative plate.

The test charge would have the same EPE anywhere on an equipotential surface.

Page 30: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Relationship between Electric Field and Electric Potential of the Capacitor

If the charge travels in the direction of the electric field, ∆V is negative,

If the charge travels opposite to the electric field, ∆V is positive.

This is the same for both negative and positive charge.

E = - ∆V/ ∆s For the capacitor, we can simplify and write this

asE = V/d

where E is the magnitude of the electric field strength, V is the potential of the positive plate (with negative plate = 0V) and d the plate spacing.

The electric field E can be expressed in units of volts/meter (V/m).

Page 31: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Graphical representations of electric potential inside a capacitor

• the green dashed contour lines represent equipotential surfaces.

• Any point on one of these surfaces is at the same potential.

• These surfaces are perpendicular to the direction of E.

• E points in the direction of decreasing potential

Page 32: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Stop to think

Rank, in order, from largest to smallest, the potentials Va to Ve

Page 33: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

EOC# 35The inner and outer surfaces

of a cell membrane carry a negative and a positive charge, respectively. Because of these charges, a potential difference of about 0.070 V exists across the membrane. The thickness of the cell membrane is 8.00 x10-9 m. What is the magnitude of the electric field in the membrane?

____________

++++++++++++

outer inner

E

Page 34: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

EOC #36What is the magnitude of

the E field at point D?

A. 100 V/cm

B. 50 V/cm

C.25 V/cm

D.12.5 V/cm

Page 35: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

EOC #36In which direction does the

E field point at D?

A. up

B. down

C. left

D. right

Page 36: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

• The capacitor stores energy, which it can release very rapidly.

•The capacitor stores separated charges, which creates a potential difference (ΔV). Each of the charges has electric potential energy due to their position in the electric field of the capacitor .

Capacitors and Energy Storage

Page 37: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

The potential difference between the battery terminals (ΔVbat) causes the charge to accumulate on the plates, which results in ΔVc

When ΔVc =ΔVbat the charge stops moving and the capacitor is fully charged.

Page 38: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

19.5 Capacitors and Dielectrics

•The capacitor retains the potential difference and the stored charge after the battery is disconnected.•Because of this, the capacitor can be used as a “temporary battery” in a circuit.•Parallel plate capacitors are often rolled into a cylinder-shaped device.

ΔVc

Page 39: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

The potential difference between the plates depends on theamount of charge separated:

•But how much charge do I need to obtain a desired ∆V ? This depends on the geometry of the capacitor.•The area of the plate determines the charge density and is proportional to number of charges needed to maintain a given ∆V.•The distance between the plates separates the unlike charges; and is inversely proportional to the number of charges needed:

qV

qVd

A

Page 40: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Given the relationship:

The constant of proportionality is ε0 :

And the whole quantity is defined as C, the capacitance of the capacitor:

qVd

A

qVd

A0 ε0 = 8.85 x 10-12 C2 /(N-m2 )

d

AC 0

Page 41: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Now we can say:

where C is called Capacitance. (“the charge capacity at a given potential difference”)SI Unit of Capacitance: coulomb/volt = farad (F)It is customary to set the arbitrary zero for potential at the negative plate and use V+ instead of ∆V:

VCq

CVq

Page 42: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

19.5 Capacitors and Dielectrics

• Capacitance is a property of the geometry of the capacitor, not its charge or potential.

•For a commercial capacitor, the geometry is fixed, and the value of C is marked on the outside.

•The capacitance does not change if the charge or the potential difference changes.

d

AC 0

ε0 = 8.85 x 10-12 C2 /(N-m2 )

For a capacitor without a dielectric:

Page 43: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

A parallel plate capacitor is connected to a battery that maintains a constant potential difference between the plates. If the plates are pulled away from each other, doubling the separation (d), by what factor does the amount of charge on the plates change ?

CVq

A. No change, the separation distance is not a factorB. By a factor of 2 (doubles). C. By a factor of one halfD. Impossible to say without knowing the area and original

separation distance of the capacitor.

Page 44: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

19.5 Capacitors and Dielectrics

•To increase the energy storage of a capacitor, we must increase it’s capacitance.

• An insulator, (“dielectric”) inserted between the plates allows more charge storage on the plates for a given ΔV (which is usually determined by the energy source in the circuit).

Page 45: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

19.5 Capacitors and Dielectrics

•Therefore a capacitor with a dielectric can store more charge at a given potential difference resulting in greater energy strorage.

•Since q = C ∆V, increasing charge while keeping ∆V the same means the capacitance must increase.

Page 46: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

THE CAPACITANCE OF A PARALLEL PLATE CAPACITOR WITH A DIELECTRIC

d

AC o

Where k is the dielectric constant of the material (found in a table in most texts), and C0 is the capacitance without dielectric.

ε0 = 8.85 x 10-12 C2/Nm2

0CC

Page 47: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Energy Storage in a Capacitor and Dielectrics

ΔVc

When a capacitor stores separated charge , it also stores energy:EPE = ½ q ∆V

Since q = C ∆V,EPE = ½ C (∆V)2

Page 48: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Remember power?

What is the potential difference between the plates of a 3.2-F capacitor that stores sufficient energy to operate a 83-W light bulb for three minutes?

Recall that power (in units of Watts) is energy used per unit time (SI units are J/s)

Page 49: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Remember power?

What is the potential difference between the plates of a 3.2-F capacitor that stores sufficient energy to operate a 83-W light bulb for three minutes?

Ans: 96.6 V

Page 50: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Which two, or more, of the following actions would increase the energy stored in a parallel plate capacitor when a constant potential difference is applied across the plates (i.e. battery remains attached)?

1. increase the area of the plates2. decrease the area of the plates3. increase the separation between the plates4. decrease the separation between the plates5. insert a dielectric between the plates

A. 2,3,5 B. 1,4,5 C. 1,3 D. 2,4

Page 51: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Energy storage with a dielectric

• An empty capacitor is capable of storing 1.0 x 10-4 J of energy when connected to a certain battery. If the distance between the plates is halved and then filled with a dielectric (κ = 2.5), how much energy could this modified capacitor store when connected to the same battery?

Page 52: Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy.

Energy storage with a dielectric

• An empty capacitor is capable of storing 1.0 x 10-4 J of energy when connected to a certain battery. If the distance between the plates is halved and then filled with a dielectric (κ = 2.5), how much energy could this modified capacitor store when connected to the same battery?

• Ans: 5E0 where E0 is 1.0 x 10-4 J