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Inductance and Capacitance BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Objectives 1. Find the current (voltage) for a capacitance or inductance given the voltage (current) as a function of time. 2. Compute the capacitance of a parallel-plate capacitor. 3. Compute the stored energy in a capacitance or inductance. 4. Describe typical physical construction of capacitors and inductors BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Capacitors and Capacitance • Capacitance – the ability of a component to store energy in the form of an electrostatic charge • Capacitor – is a component designed to provide a specific measure of capacitance BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Capacitors and Capacitance • Capacitor Construction – Plates – Dielectric BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Capacitor Charge • Electrostatic Charge Develops • Electrostatic Field Stores energy Insert Figure 12.2 BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Capacitor Discharge Insert Figure 12.3 BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Capacitors and Capacitance • Capacity – amount of charge that a capacitor can store per unit volt applied Q C V or Q CV where C = the capacity (or capacitance) of the component, in coulombs per volt Q = the total charge stored by the component V = the voltage across the capacitor corresponding to the value of Q BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Capacitance Insert Figure 12.4 BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Capacitance • Unit of Measure – farad (F) = 1 coulomb per volt (C/V) • Capacitor Ratings – Most capacitors rated in the picofarad (pF) to microfarad (F) range – Capacitors in the millifarad range are commonly rated in thousands of microfarads: 68 mF = 68,000 F – Tolerance • Usually fairly poor • Variable capacitors used where exact values required BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Capacitors and Capacitance • Physical Characteristics of Capacitors C (8,85 x10 12 A ) r d where C = the capacity of the component, in farads (8.85 X 10-12) = the permittivity of a vacuum, in farads per meter (F/m) or expressed as o r = the relative permittivity of the dielectric A = the area of either plate d = the distance between the plates (i.e., the thickness of the dielectric) BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Capacitance of the ParallelPlate Capacitor εA C d ε0 8.85 10 r 0 BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering A WL 12 Fm Capacitance Q Cv Q Cv v C t t t dv iC dt For DC v (t ) 0 i (t ) 0 t It acts as a voltage source BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Voltage in terms of Current t qt q q Cv, v C i t dt qt0 , q(to) is the initial charge t0 1 v t C t t0 qt0 i t dt C 1 v t C BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING qt0 v t0 C t it dt vt 0 t0 Department of Electronic Engineering Stored Energy p(t ) v(t )i(t ) w(t ) t to v(t ) i (t ) C t v p(t ) Cv t t dv p(t )dt, w(t ) Cv dt, w(t ) to dt 1 2 1 2 w(t ) Cv (t ) Cv (to ) 2 2 BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering v(t ) Cvdv v ( to ) Series Capacitors • Series Capacitors CT 1 1 1 1 ..... C1 C2 Cn Where CT = the total series capacitance Cn = the highest-numbered capacitor in the string BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Parallel Capacitors • Connecting Capacitors in Parallel CT C1 C2 ..... Cn where Cn = the highest-numbered capacitor in the parallel circuit BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Inductance • Unit of Measure – Henry (H) – Inductance is measured in volts per rate of change in current – When a change of 1A/s induces 1V across an inductor, the amount of inductance is said to be 1 H di vL L dt BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Insert Figure 10.5 Department of Electronic Engineering Inductance • Induced Voltage di vL L dt where vL = the instantaneous value of induced voltage L = the inductance of the coil, measured in henries (H) di = the instantaneous rate of change in inductor current dt (in amperes per second) BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Inductance di v t L dt For DC di(t ) 0 v (t ) 0 dt It acts as a short circuit BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Current in terms of Voltage di 1 v L , di vdt dt L i (t ) 1 di i ( to ) L t to 1 i(t ) i(to ) L 1 i (t ) L BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING t to v(t )dt t v(t )dt to v(t )dt i(to ) Department of Electronic Engineering Stored Energy di(t ) v (t ) L dt p(t ) v(t )i(t ) di(t ) di(t ) p ( t ) i (t ) v (t ) i ( t ) L Li (t ) dt dt t t i (t ) di w(t ) p(t )dt, w(t ) Li dt, w(t ) Lidi to to i ( to ) dt 1 2 1 2 w(t ) Li (t ) Li (to ) 2 2 BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Inductance Insert Figure 10.8 BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Connecting Inductors in Series • Series-Connected Coils LT L1 L2 L3 ... Ln where Ln = the highest-numbered inductor in the circuit BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Characteristic of Capacitor and Inductor Under AC Excitation BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Connecting Inductors in Parallel • Parallel-Connected Coils LT 1 1 1 1 .... L1 L2 Ln where Ln = the highest-numbered inductor in the circuit BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Alternating Voltage and Current Characteristics • AC Coupling and DC Isolation: An Overview – DC Isolation – a capacitor prevents flow of charge once it reaches its capacity Insert Figure 12.6 BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering AC Coupling and DC Isolation • AC Coupling – DC offset is blocked Insert Figure 12.7 BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Capacitor Current dv iC C dt where iC = the instantaneous value of capacitor current C = the capacity of the component(s), in farads dv = the instantaneous rate of change in capacitor voltage dt BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Alternating Voltage and Current Characteristics • Sine-Wave Values of dv dt dv iC C dt dv – reaches its maximum value when v = 0 dt Insert Figure 12.8 BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering The Phase Relationship Between Capacitor Current and Voltage • Current leads voltage by 90° • Voltage lags current by 90° v V sin t i Cdv / dt CV cost CV sin(t 90 o ) BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Capacitive Reactance (XC) • Series and Parallel Values of XC Insert Figure 12.18 BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Capacitive Reactance (XC) • Capacitor Resistance – Dielectric Resistance – generally assumed to be infinite – Effective Resistance – opposition to current, also called capacitive reactance (XC) Insert Figure 12.15 BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Capacitive Reactance (XC) • Calculating the Value of XC Vrms XC I rms BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING or 1 XC 2 f C Department of Electronic Engineering Capacitive Reactance (XC) • XC and Ohm’s Law – Example: Calculate the total current below Insert Figure 12.17 Xc 1 2 f 1 V 10V 121, I c s 8.26mA 2 (60 Hz )( 22 F ) X c 121 BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering The Phase Relationship Between Inductor Current and Voltage di • Sine-Wave Values of v L L dt – di reaches its maximum value when i = 0 dt Insert Figure 10.9 BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering The Phase Relationship Between Inductor Current and Voltage • Voltage leads current by 90° • Current lags voltage by 90° i I sin t v Ld i / dt LI cos t LI sin(t 90 o ) BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Inductive Reactance (XL) • Inductor Opposes Current Vrms 10V Opposition 10k I rms 1mA Insert Figure 10.15 BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Inductive Reactance (XL) • Inductive Reactance (XL) – the opposition (in ohms) that an inductor presents to a changing current • Calculating the Value of XL Vrms XL I rms BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING or X L 2 f L Department of Electronic Engineering Inductive Reactance (XL) • XL and Ohm’s Law – Example: Calculate the total current below Vs 12V I 12mA X L 1K BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Capacitive Versus Inductive Phase Relationships • Voltage (E) in inductive (L) circuits leads current (I) by 90° (ELI) • Current (I) in capacitive (C ) circuits leads voltage (E) by 90° (ICE) BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Alternating Voltage and Current Characteristics Insert Figure 12.10 BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Euler’s identity t 2 f A cos t A cos 2 f t Figure 4.23 In Euler expression, A cos t = Real (Ae j t ) BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering y Ae jt dy jAe jt dt dv For Capacitor, i C dt if v Ae j t , then i CjAe j t , that is , i Cj v v 1 Z C ( it is called the impedance of a capacitor) i j C di For Inductor , v L dt if i Ae j t , then v Lj Ae j t . v v jL i, jL Z L ( it is called the impedance of an inductor) i BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering The impedance element Figure 4.29 BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Impedances of R, L, and C in the complex plane Figure 4.33 BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Figure 4.37 BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering An AC circuit Figure 4.41 BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering AC equivalent circuits Figure 4.44 BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering Rules for impedance and admittance reduction Figure 4.45 BASIC ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Department of Electronic Engineering