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6.1 Capacitance

The document summarizes a lecture on capacitance. It defines capacitance as the proportionality constant between the charge stored on capacitor plates and the potential difference between them. The capacitance depends on the geometry of the capacitor and is independent of the amount of charge. Common capacitor geometries are discussed, such as parallel plates and nested spherical shells. The energy stored in a capacitor is defined. Dielectrics, or materials between the plates, are introduced and how they can affect the capacitance.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
63 views9 pages

6.1 Capacitance

The document summarizes a lecture on capacitance. It defines capacitance as the proportionality constant between the charge stored on capacitor plates and the potential difference between them. The capacitance depends on the geometry of the capacitor and is independent of the amount of charge. Common capacitor geometries are discussed, such as parallel plates and nested spherical shells. The energy stored in a capacitor is defined. Dielectrics, or materials between the plates, are introduced and how they can affect the capacitance.

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gzb012
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Scott Hughes Massachusetts Institute of Technology Department of Physics 8.

022 Spring 2005 Lecture 6: Capacitance

17 February 2005

6.1

Capacitance

Suppose that I have two chunks of metal. A charge +Q is on one of these chunks, Q is on the other (so that the system is neutral overall). Each chunk will be at some constant potential. What is the potential dierence between the two chunks of metal?

+ + +Q + + 2 + + 1 Q

Whatever the potential dierence V 2 1 = 12 E ds turns out to be, it must of course turn out to be independent of the integration path. In fact, as we can show with a little thought, the potential dierence V must be proportional to the geometry. This means that the potential dierence (or voltage) between the two chunks must take the form V = (Horribly messy constant depending on geometry) Q . The horrible mess that appears in this proportionality law depends only on geometry. In other words, it will depend on the size and shape of the two metal chunks, their relative orientation, and their separation. It does not depend on their charge. This constant is dened as 1/C, where C is the Capacitance of this system. A system like this is then called a capacitor. The 1/ may seem a bit wierd; the point is that one usually writes the capacitance formula in a dierent way: we put Q = CV . A key thing to bear in mind when using this formula is that Q refers to the charge separation of the system. In other words, when I say that a capacitor is charged up to some level Q, 54

Figure 1: Q = CV .

I mean that I have put +Q on one part of the capacitor, Q on the other. The capacitor as a whole remains neutral!! I emphasize this now because I often nd students are somewhat confused by this point, particularly when we start thinking about circuits that have capacitors in them. 6.1.1 Why are the charge and voltage proportional?

The real concern here is, how do we know that when we say double the charge on the capacitor, the charge doesnt move around and cause the dependence to be more complicated? The simple answer is the principle of superposition: whenever we double the amount of charge, the elds that these charges create simply double. Hence, the potential dierence (which is just the line integral of the eld) must also double. Theres an implied assumption here, though: we are assuming that there is enough charge smeared out on the plates of the capacitor to uniformly cover them. Imagine we just had one electron on the minus plate, and one electron hole on the plus plate. If we just doubled the charge, the electron on the - plate indeed might move somewhere else. This situation could be messy! Fortunately, in every situation that is of practical interest, the assumption that the plates are evenly coated with a charge excess is a good one. This is because the elementary charge is so small even if theres just a tiny tiny amount of charge say 1012 Coulombs that means weve got something like 6 million excess electrons. 6.1.2 Units of capacitance

In SI units, we measure charge in Coulombs and potential in Volts, so the unit of capacitance is the Coulomb/Volt. This combination is given a special name: the Farad, or F. In cgs units, we measure charge in esu and potential in esu/cm. The unit of capacitance is thus just the centimeter! This is actually kind of cool: objects that are big (have lots of 55

centimeters) tend to have a big capacitance. Its important to know how to convert between these two units: when we are computing capacitance from the systems characteristics, cgs units are nice, since its just a matter of getting the geometry right. But SI units are used almost exclusively in circuits. 1 cm = 1.11 1012 F 1 pF . pF means picofarad one trillionth of a Farad. Capacitors typically come in microfarads or picofarads; this is because (as we shall see in a moment) a Farad turns out to be an enormous amount of capacitance.

6.2
6.2.1

Some examples
Isolated sphere

We take a sphere of radius R and put a charge Q on it. Its potential (relative to innity) is V = Q/R. The spheres capacitance is therefore Csphere = R . When we began discussing the notion of capacitors, we talked about the potential dierence between two conductors. In this case, the second conductor is a virtual plate at innity. Theres one spherical capacitor that we use all the time: the earth. It has a radius (and hence a capacitance) of 6.4108 cm. This is so large that we can eectively take charge from or dump charge onto the earth without changing its electrical potential at all. Converting, the earth has a capacitance Cearth = 0.0007 Farad enormous, but still signicantly smaller than a Farad! The fact that we can dump charge onto or take charge from the earth without changing its potential appreciably means that it is often convenient to dene the earth as the reference point for computing potential. Many circuits take advantage of this by hooking directly to ground a lead that runs into the earth. That grounded lead is then dened, by convention, as potential zero. (Students educated in the remnants of the British Empire may have learned to call a circuit that is grounded earthed.)

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6.2.2

Parallel plates

Consider a pair of plates, each with area A and separated by a distance s.

Area A Charge +Q s Charge Q

If the plates are close together (s A), we can approximate the eld between these plates as those coming from a pair of innite planes:

positive 2 away from plate

negative 2 towards plate 4 between plates 0 outside plates

Summing an innite plane with charge density = +Q/A and = Q/A we nd E = 4 = 4Q/A between the plates, and zero outside of the plates. The eld points from the positive plate to the negative plate, so the potential dierence from the negative to the positive plate is
pos s

V =

neg

E ds = 4

ds =
0

4Qs . A

Rewriting this in the form Q = CV , we read o the capacitance: Cplates = A . 4s

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This is an area divided by a length, so it has the correct units. Its pretty important to know about capacitance in SI units, since most circuit elements are discussed using things like Volts and Farads rather than statvolts and centimeters. Converting is easy: we just need to remember that the electric eld in general has a factor of k (the constant from Coulombs law) attached to it. Hence, the voltage V likewise picks up this factor; rearranging to solve for the capacitance, we nd Cplates = 1 A . k 4s

In cgs units, k = 1, so this rather trivially reduces to what we had before. In SI units, k = 1/4 0 , and we nd Cplates =
0

A . s

Whenever you work out a formula for capacitance in cgs units, you can easily convert to SI by multiplying by 1/k = 4 0 . 6.2.3 Nested shells

Return to the example discussed last lecture: a pair of nested spherical shells,

R2 Q2 R1

Q1

The potential dierence we found in this case was = V = Set Q2 = Q = Q1 : = V = Q Rearranging into the form Q = CV , we nd C= R1 R2 . R1 R 2 58 1 1 R2 R1 . Q2 Q2 . R2 R1

Note that if R1 is just barely larger than R2 , this gives the same result as the parallel plate formula: putting R1 = R2 + s, we nd C =
2 R2 + R 2 s s 2 R2 s s 2 4R2 = 4s A . = 4s

R2

2 On the second to last line, weve used the fact that 4R2 is the surface area of the sphere.

6.3

Energy stored in a capacitor

Suppose we are charging up a capacitor. At some intermediate point in the process, there is a charge +q on one plate, q on the other. We move a charge dq from the negative charge to the positive charge. It takes work to do this: we are forcing a positive charge in the direction opposite to what it wants to do. The amount of work we do moving this charge is dW = V (q) dq q = dq . C Integrating this to a total charge separation of Q, we nd that the work that is done charging up the capacitor is
Q

W =
0

q dq C

1 Q2 . = 2 C This is the energy stored that is stored in the capacitor: U= 1 Q2 1 = CV 2 . 2 C 2

Weve used Q = CV in the second equality. Its useful to carefully re-examine this formula for the case of the parallel plate capacitor: we put C = A/4s, and note that the charge Q = EA/4, where E is the electric eld between the plates. Then, 1 Q2 U = 2 C 1 E 2 A2 4s = 2 16 2 A E2 = As . 8 The last line is the energy density of the electric eld between the plates times the volume of that region. 59

6.4

Dielectrics

The capacitors weve discussed here are somewhat articial: the space between their plates is taken to be empty. In the real world, the normal situation is that this space is lled with something air, plastic, paper, compressed leprechauns, whatever. The stu that lls this space interacts with the electric eld, and can have an important impact on the the properties of the capacitor. The basic idea can be understood fairly simply. The key point is that many materials are polarizable: they are made out of molecules that, though neutral overall, have a net excess of + charge at one end and an excess of charge at the other. This means that each molecule looks like a little electric dipole a distribution whose total charge is zero, but that shows non-trivial charge separation. Normally, the polar character of these molecules is unimportant the random, mostly thermal motion of the molecules means that at any moment there is no net polarization to a big mass of them. If we take a block of such material and slide it between two parallel plates, it looks (roughly) like this:
+ + + + + + +

Suppose we now charge up these plates, so that there is an electric eld between them. We leave these plates with xed charge. All of these little dipoles will now want to line up the + ends will align with the negatively charged plate, and vice versa: By lining up in this way, they will tend to reduce the electric eld between the plates the eld due to the charges on the plates themselves is superposed upon a eld pointing in the opposite direction due to the alignment of the dipoles. For an enormous number of molecules, the reduction in the applied electric eld can be summarized using a single number: Fixed charge situation: E with
dielectric

= E without

dielectric

/K .

The number K is called the dielectric constant; its something we can measure and catalog for various substances. Table 10.1 of Purcell lists a whole bunch; the values range from K 1 for air to K 80 for water. (Water has a huge dielectric constant because of the charge distribution associated with its bent molecules.) For us, the value of K is always greater than or equal to one. 60

+ +

+ + + +

+ +

Since the electric eld is reduced by K, the voltage between the plates is likewise reduced. For the parallel plate capacitor and in cgs units, we have V with
dielectric

4Qs . KA

Invoking the denition of the capacitance, we nd C with


dielectric

KA = KC without 4s

dielectric

Its worth thinking for a moment about what the dielectric does in some specic circumstances. Suppose I have a capacitor C whose plates have been charged up to some xed charge Q. This is easily done by hooking a capacitor up to a voltage source V (e.g., a battery) and then removing the source the capacitor will then hold the charge Q = CV . If I insert a dielectric between the plates, the capacitance increases; since the charge is xed, the voltage must decrease: Fixed charge: V new = Q Q V orig = = . C new KC orig K

Suppose instead I take the capacitor and hold it at xed voltage. This is also easy to do we hook up our capacitor to a voltage source and just leave it there. The capacitance again increases, which means the charge must increase: Fixed voltage: Qnew = C new V = KC orig V = KQorig .

The extra charge is actually pulled from the voltage source. Note that in this circumstance the electric eld between the plates does not decrease when we insert the dielectric! However, it takes more charge to hold this eld than it does without the dielectric the dielectric wants to reduce the electric eld; the voltage source needs to supply more charge to ght this tendency. 61

To wrap this section up, consider the capacitance in SI units. With a dielectric, it is given by C with
dielectric

K 0A s A . s =

The combination K 0 is called the permittivity of the dielectric. When K = 1, the permittivity is just 0 , the permittivity of free space (meaning empty space). In practice, people dont usually describe dielectrics using permittivity the dielectric constant K is much more useful. However, you do encounter the term sometimes; and, it helps to explain why 0 is called the permittivity of free space.

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