Experiment 4: The Potentiometer/ Capacitor Combinations How to use meters: Analog meters (the kind with a needle): Red connectors are for + and black for -, or they are just labeled + or - . There is one of one sign, which you always connect to, and several of the other, which you use just one of. Which of these you use determines which scale you read. For example, if you put the wire on a connector labeled 30 V, read the scale which goes from 0 to 30 V. Also, check that the meter is correctly zeroed, and have the instructor adjust it if it isn't. Digital meters: Turn the dial to the function you want. For example, 20 in the area marked DCV turns it into a DC voltmeter which reads from 0 to 20 V. DCA stands for DC amps. If the meter has more than two connectors, the negative wire always goes to COM. Where the other wire goes depends on whether you want to measure volts, amps, or milliamps; the sockets are labeled. On the yellow meters, the dial goes in the same place for the 10 A scale and for the 20 mA scale; which you are using depends on which socket the + wire is in. PART ONE: The potentiometer We wish to measure a battery’s emf, E; meaning the “voltage” created by the chemicals in it. (Don’t confuse E with E, the electric field strength. E is in volts, E in volts per meter.) It might seem that you could just measure E with a voltmeter. But, the materials the battery is made of have resistance, and Ohm’s law says there is a voltage drop across this “internal resistance” if a current flows. Since a voltmeter draws current from the battery, the potential difference between the battery’s terminals is E – Ir, which is less than E. A potentiometer measures the voltage without drawing any current, so E – Ir just equals E , and you get the true emf. The voltage from a power supply is put across a long, bare, high resistance wire, CE, as shown. The connection at point D is moved until VCD is equal to the emf of the battery. You can tell the right spot for D because when the voltages balance, the galvanometer (a sensitive ammeter) reads zero. You can then get VCD (which equals E) from a proportion: Voltage CD is to the wire’s total voltage as length CD is to the wire’s total length (100 cm): V 100cm so, V 100cm PROCEDURE: Record the value for its emf printed on the battery. Connect the battery directly to an analog voltmeter (the kind with a needle) and record the reading. Ask for a different battery if it isn’t between .1 V and 1.0 V. (The effects we are studying are more pronounced for an old, dead battery because of its large internal resistance.) Set up the potentiometer circuit. Don't put the battery backwards: The wire from + on the battery should lead to + on the power supply. Set the power supply at between 2 and 4 volts. Keep the power off when not taking readings so the wire doesn't get hot. Tap the key at point D on different parts of the wire to find where the galvanometer reads zero. Do not hold the key down with the galvanometer at full scale, or it may suffer. Read the length l, from the positive end of the wire. (The same section of wire the battery is connected across.) Find the electromotive force of the battery. In your conclusion, comment on which of your three values represents the true emf of the battery and why. Part Two: Capacitor Combinations A group of capacitors is assembled, as shown. You will predict what the voltage across each capacitor in the group should be, then measure them with a digital meter to see if you were right. Some capacitors are labeled without units: "2-25DC" means 2 μF, and a maximum voltage of 25 V DC. Select four different capacitors of at least 1 μF each (the higher the better). The largest capacitance should be no more than ten times the smallest. Don’t hook capacitors up backward: Some have arrows pointing to the negative end; with this kind of capacitor, that's important. CALCULATIONS : 1. Choose some potential difference, V, to put across the group. (How much doesn't matter.) 2. Calculate the equivalent capacitance of the group of four capacitors. 3. Calculate V1: Since C1 and the rest of the circuit are in series, QTot = Q1. So, Ceq V = C1 V1. 4. Find V2 from V and V1. 5. Calculate V3: Since C3 and C4 are in series, Q3 = Q4, so C3V3 = C4V4. Putting that together with V4 = V2 - V3 gives C3V3 = C4(V2 - V3). You know everything in that except V3. 6. Calculate V4. MEASUREMENTS. Use a digital voltmeter: (The capacitors would almost immediately discharge through an analog meter.) 1. Put the voltmeter across the power supply and set it to the voltage you chose. 2. Connect the meter to a capacitor with the power supply off. If it doesn't read zero, short out the capacitor to discharge it. (Temporarily run a wire from one side of the capacitor to the other.) 3. Turn on the power supply. Record what the meter said before it started decreasing. (The capacitors will slowly discharge even through a digital meter.) Promptly turn the power supply back off. 4. Move the meter to a different capacitor and repeat 2 and 3. 5. If you need to double check anything, turn off the power supply and short out each capacitor first. Otherwise, some charge which flowed through the meter might affect your results. Compare the measured voltages to what you calculated. The main source of experimental error is the accuracy of the capacitances. Based on this, the difference between your calculated and observed values should be no more than 10%. A suggestion for your write-up: Sketching a circuit is easier and clearer than trying to describe it in words. You still need words to explain how it works, but for the part where you tell the reader what you were working with, a picture works a lot better than “We ran a wire from the power supply to the battery. We ran another wire from …” PHY 132 Report on Experiment 4: The Potentiometer/Capacitor Combinations Part I: E printed on battery = _____________ Voltmeter reading = _____________ Potentiometer: V = _____________ l = _____________ Determine ε : Part II: C1 = _____________ C2 = _____________ C3 = _____________ C4 = _____________ V = _____________ Calculation of Ceq: Calculation of V1, V2, V3& V4 (continue on back if necessary): Measured V's: V1 = ____________ V2 = _____________V3 = _____________ V4 = _____________