Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point...

24
Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface 5. Capacitance and Capacitors

Transcript of Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point...

Page 1: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

Chapter 16

Electric Energy andCapacitance

1. Potential difference and Electric potential2. Point Charges3. Charge Conductors4. Equipotential Surface5. Capacitance and Capacitors

Page 2: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

Work and Potential Energy How do I calculate

work? How do I calculate

electric potential energy?

How do I relate work with electric potential energy?

Page 3: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

Potential Difference What is potential difference? What are its SI units? Potential difference vs. Potential

energy Potential difference for uniform

electric field

Page 4: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

Example A proton moves a distance of 0.02m

parallel to the electric field of 200 N/C.

a) What is the work done by the proton?

b) What is the change in potential energy?

c) What is the change in potential?

Page 5: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

Energy and Charge Movements

Basic fact For positive charge For negative charge Energy conservation

Page 6: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

Electric Field and Electric Potential of a Point Charge

What is zero electric potential?

How do I calculate electric potential due to a point charge?

Observations

Page 7: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

Electrical Potential Energy of Two Charges

What about Superposition principle?

How do I calculate it?

What if?

Page 8: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

Examplesa) Find the electric potential 1.0 cm from

a proton.b) What is the potential difference

between two points that are 1 and 2 cm apart?

Page 9: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

Examplesa) Two point charges are on the y axis,

one of magnitude 3x10-9 c at the origin and a second of magnitude 6.0 x 10-9 c at y=30 cm. Find the potential at y=60 cm.

Page 10: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

Conductors in Equilibrium What happens to charge? What about electric field

and potential? Electric field Potential

Page 11: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

The Electron Volt What is it? What are its units? Some comparisons

Electrons in normal atoms have energies of 10’s of eV

Excited electrons have energies of 1000’s of eV

High energy gamma rays have energies of millions of eV

Page 12: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

Equipotentials and Electric Fields Lines – Positive Charge What is it? How about

work done? How about

electric field lines?

Dipole

Page 13: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

Capacitance What is it? How do I find it? What are its SI units?

Page 14: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

Parallel-Plate Capacitor Construction How does geometry

play its part? How does the charge

build up on the plates?

What does the electric field look like?

Page 15: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

Applications of Capacitors – Computers

Computers use capacitors in many ways

Page 16: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

Capacitors in Circuits What is a Circuit? How do you represent a circuit? How do I connect a capacitor in a

circuit? What happens when a capacitor is

connected in a circuit? What different ways can one

connect a capacitor in a circuit?

Page 17: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

Capacitors in Parallel Total charge Potential

difference Equivalent

capacitance

Page 18: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

Equivalent Capacitor How do I calculate

equivalent capacitance?

Page 19: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

Capacitors in Series

How do I connect capacitors in series? What happens when capacitors are connected in series? The potential difference How do I calculate equivalent capacitance? How do I calculate the energy stored in a capacitor?

Page 20: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

Medical Application Defibrillators

When fibrillation occurs, the heart produces a rapid, irregular pattern of beats

A fast discharge of electrical energy through the heart can return the organ to its normal beat pattern

Page 21: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

Capacitors with Dielectrics What is a

dielectric? How does it affect

capacitance? What is dielectric

strength? Atomic view of

dielectrics

Page 22: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

Examples

A capacitor of 4 micro farad is connected across the a 12 volt battery. What is the charge on each plate?

Page 23: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

Examples

Two capacitors are connected in series across a 400 V power source. What is the charge on each capacitor?

Page 24: Chapter 16 Electric Energy and Capacitance 1. Potential difference and Electric potential 2. Point Charges 3. Charge Conductors 4. Equipotential Surface.

Examples

Two capacitors are connected in parallel across a 400 V power source. What is the charge on each capacitor?