Chapter 18 Electrical Energy and Capacitance Chapter 18 Objectives • • • • • Electrical potential Electric Potential from a Point Charge Capacitance Parallel Plate Capacitor Dielectrics Electrostatic Force • Because the Coulomb force is the same as the gravitational force, it must also be conservative • So it fits the rules of conservative energies – ΔPE + ΔKE = 0 • Solving you see that change in potential is opposite to change in kinetic – ΔKE = -ΔPE • Apply Work-Kinetic Energy Theorem – W = ΔKE – W = -ΔPE = -qEd Electric Potential • The electric potential is the change in potential energy of a charged object. – Often referred to as a potential difference. • Because it is the difference in potential energies of a charged particle at differing locations. • This can vary because of the magnitude of charge. • Larger the charge, the more energy it has! – Potential energy divided by charge • SI unit is Volt – V • 1 V = 1 J /C – denoted by V • So the voltage is the measurement of the ability of the charge to be moved, not the actual motion itself. or ΔV = V2-V1 = ΔPE /q = -Ed Electric Potential Between Two Points • Recall that in an electric field, electrons are transferred from positive to negative. • So particles move from positive locations to negative locations. – So a positive charge gains electric potential energy when it is moved in a direction opposite the electric field. • Because it is being pulled away from the “attractive” point, much like lifting a rock off the ground gives it more potential energy. – So a negative charge loses electric potential energy when it moves in a direction opposite the electric field. • Because it is traveling away from the negative center which is what it wants to do anyways. Potential Energy Between Points • The potential energy created from those two points depends on the work done to move the charges – Opposite sign charges attract and work is negative – If the work is directly proportional to the separation between the charges. » So if the separation gets smaller, the work is negative. – Meaning the charges give off energy • Same sign produces positive potential energy – Meaning energy added to system PE electric q1q2 = kC r This shows the electric potential energy due to point 1 created on point 2. Electric Potential from Point Charge • Every point in space has an electric potential, no matter what charge. • The potential depends on the size of the charge and how far the charge is from the reference point. – Electric potential is a scalar quantity, so direction does not matter. • But the sign does. – So when asked to find the net electric potential, simply find the algebraic sum of the individual potentials. q V = kC r As distance increases, potential decreases Equipotential Surfaces • A surface on which all points have the same potential is called an equipotential surface. – No work is required to move a charge at constant speed while on the surface. – The electric field at every point on the surface acts perpendicular to that point on the surface. • This really tells us that no matter the surface characteristics, a diagram can be drawn using each surface as a single point source. Capacitance • We can now set two conducting surfaces, each being a equipotential surface, close enough to each other to create an electric field. • The two surfaces do not have the same potential difference, therefore work can be done between the two. – As the two surfaces are charging by an outside voltage source, electrons are being taken from one surface and transferred to the other surface through the battery. • The charging will stop once the plates reach the same potential difference with each other that the terminals of the voltage source endure. – When the voltage source is removed, the capacitor now becomes the primary voltage source for the circuit. • So capacitance is defined as the ratio of the charge between the conducting surfaces and the potential difference between surfaces. – Denoted by C – Measured in Farads, F • But a Farad is actually a very large number Q C= V – so we typically measure in the range of F to pF. Parallel-Plate Capacitor • The most common design for a capacitor is to place two conducting plates parallel to each other and separated by a small distance. • Distances of millimeters and smaller! • By connecting opposite leads of a power source to each plate, the charges begin to line themselves up according to the potential difference of the battery. – Remember, the capacitor stops charging once it reaches the same voltage as the battery. • Even when the battery is disconnected, the capacitor will maintain the potential difference of the battery until the two plates are again connected by a conducting material. permittivity of free space C = 0 0 = 8.85 x 10-12 C2/(Nm2) A d surface area of one plate separation between the plates Dielectrics • The material between the plates of a parallel plate capacitor can effect the capacitance of the system. • A dielectric is an insulating material that is placed in between plates of a capacitor to increase its capacitance. – Insulators are used because the plates can realign the charges on the surface of the insulator space for the charge to be stored. – That gives the opportunity for more charge to be transferred to the plates of the capacitor for more storage. + + + + + + + + + + - - - - - - - - - - + + + + + + + + + + - - - - - - - - - - Dielectric Constant • Each material is different and has different abilities to give up electrons to help increase the capacitance. – That increase is a multiple factor called the dielectric constant, . • So: C = C0 • This differs from the dielectric strength, which is the largest electric field a capacitor can hold. – There is no relationship between larger the constant, stronger the field. Energy Stored in a Capacitor • Due to the fact that the energy stored in a capacitor is directly related to the work required to transfer that charge from plate to plate, we see the following: – In order for work to be performed, there must be a potential difference between plates in order to carry the charge across. • W = V• Q – Thanks to the Work-Kinetic Energy Theorem, and seeing that Q is the equivalent of mass in the mechanics world • W = ½ Q V – Similar to kinetic energy in the mechanics world – We combine those to produce a series of equations that would help to find the energy stored in a capacitor • PE = ½ Q V = ½ C(V)2 = Q2 / 2C