- Capacitance is the stored charge between 2 metal plates
- Dielectric is the insulated barrier separating 2 plates in a capacitor
- Fleming’s Left Hand Rule: When a current is passed through a coil in a magnetic field, a force acts on the coil to try and make it turn
- Fleming’s Right Hand Rule: If a conductor is moved through a magnetic field an electric current will be generated
- Amplitude is the height of a waveform
- Peak value of a waveform is the maximum positive or negative value
- Peak to peak value is the difference between the maximum positive and maximum negative value. It is normally twice the peak value.
- RMS (root mean square) is the equivalent D.C. current or voltage that would produce the same heating effect as the A.C. waveform
- Out of phase waveforms have the same frequency but start at different times
- In phase waveforms have the same frequency and start at the same time
- Capacitive reactance is a measure of a capacitor's opposition to AC
- Inductive reactance is a measure of an inductor's opposition to AC
- Resonant frequency is the frequency at which the inductive reactance is equal and opposite to capacitive reactance in a series tuned circuit
- Magnification / Q Factor is the ratio of the voltage across the inductor (or capacitor) to the supply voltage at resonance
- Bandwidth of a selectivity curve is the frequency range where the output is at least 0.707 of the maximum value
- Filter is a circuit that will pass some frequencies and reject others
Farads
is a unit of capacitanceJoules
is the unit of work doneDegrees
is the unit for phaseHenrys
is the unit for inductance
-
E = ½(CV²)
whereE
is energy stored in capacitor -
Q = CV
whereQ
is quantity of electricity,C
is capacitance,V
is voltage -
T = RC
whereT
is time constant,C
is capacitance,R
is resistance -
C = C₁ + C₂ + C₃
whereC
is total capacitance in parallel -
1/C = 1/C₁ + 1/C₂ + 1/C₃
whereC
is total capacitance in series -
RMS √2 = RMS x 1.414 = V (peak)
whereRMS
is the RMS / DC equivalent voltage,1.414
is root 2,V (peak)
is the maximum peak voltage -
ω = 2πf
whereω
is angular rotation -
Xc = 1/ωC = 1/(2πfC)
whereXc
is capacitive reactive,ω
is angular rotation -
Xc = V / I
whereXc
is the reactive capacitance,V
is the DC Voltage,I
is the AC -
XL = ωL = 2πfL
whereXL
is inductive reactance -
Z = √(R² + XL²)
whereZ
is impedance,R
is resistance,XL
is inductive reactance for an RL series circuit -
Z = √(R² + Xc²)
whereZ
is impedance,R
is resistance,Xc
is capacitive reactance for an RC series circuit -
For an RLC series circuit:
V² = (VL - Vc)² + Vr²
whereV
is total voltage,VL
is voltage across inductor,Vc
is voltage across capacitor,Vr
is voltage across resistorV ∝ Z
Z² = (XL - Xc)² + R²
whereZ
is total impedance,XL
is inductive reactance,Xc
is capacitive reactance,R
is resistance of the resistor
-
or
2πf = 1/√(LC)
wherefo
is resonant frequency,L
is inductance,C
is capacitance -
Z = L/CR
whereZ
is dynamic impedance in a parallel tuned circuit at resonance,L
is inductance of the inductor,C
is capacitance of the capacitor,R
is resistance of the resistor -
Q = fo / (f2 – f1)
whereQ
is the ratio,fo
is resonant frequency,f1
is lower bound,f2
is upper bound
-
Capacitor-resistor in series
-
Inductor-resistor in series
-
RLC (resistor-inductor-capacitor) circuits:
-
Parallel tuned circuit
-
Leading and lagging
-
Vector diagram
- angular rotation always goes anti-clockwise starting from 3 o'clock
-
Capacitor current-voltage phasor diagram
-
Inductor current-voltage phasor diagram
-
Phasor diagram comparison
-
Capacitive reactance
-
Impedance
-
Total voltage
Vs
in RLC series circuit -
Total impedance
Z
in RLC series circuit -
Total current
Is
in RLC parallel circuit -
Resonant frequency
-
Tuned circuit resonant frequency
-
Bandwidth in a parallel tuned circuit
-
response graphs
Image credit: Electronic tutorial
- 2 metals are connected by battery
- Plate "B" is now negatively charged and repels so strongly that the current ceases
- The plates have a very small capacitance for the storage of electricity
- very important to have insulation (dielectric) between the plates that will stand up to the voltage that is to be used
Capacitance of a capacitor is:
∝
area of the plates1/∝
distance between the 2 plates∝
permittivity of the dielectric between the plates
Material | Permittivity |
---|---|
Air | 1 |
Dry paper | 2.5 |
Glass | 5 |
Mica | 7 |
- Paper capacitors
- "sandwich” of strips of foil and wax impregnated paper
- 2 foil forms the plates
- waxed paper is the dielectric
- Mica capacitor
- alternate layers of thin metal sheet
- thin layers of mica as dielectric
- Silvered mica
- Silver is sprayed on the sheets of mica to form the plates
- advantages:
- possible to make these capacitors very accurately
- value of the capacitance changes very little with wide temperature changes
- E.g. suitable for the tuned circuits in oscillators
- Ceramic capacitors
- small pieces of ceramic that have a coating of silver on each side
- E.g. suitable for de-coupling
- disadvantages
- large capacitance variations with changes of temperature
- should not be used for tuned circuits
- Electrolytic Capacitors
- two aluminum foil strips
- interleaved with an absorbent paper strip and wound very tightly into a cylinder
- one capacitor plate is one of the foil strips and the other plate is the electrolyte
- the oxide acting as the insulating dielectric
- !! very important to ensure that electrolytic capacitors are connected right way round in any circuit
- Variable capacitors (tuning capacitors)
- one set of fixed plates and one set of moving plates
- dielectric is usually air
- When the plates are rotated they overlap, and hence the capacitance, changes
- Generator
- has a coil that continues to rotate in the same direction
- produces electricity that flows in one direction for half a revolution and reverses in the next half cycle
- current and voltage are in sine-wave
- When a voltage is applied to a capacitor the initial charge current is high at a time when the voltage is small
- In a capacitive circuit:
- current leads the voltage by 90°
- voltage lags the current by 90°
- In an inductor, voltage leads the current by 90°
Series | Parallel | |
---|---|---|
Voltage across each component | calculate | same |
Current across each component | same | calculate |
R (resistor) | resistance in phase with voltage | resistance in phase with voltage |
response curve resonant frequency | at minimum resistance | at maximum resistance |
resonant frequency circuit | acceptor circuit | rejector circuit |
Tuned circuits are used in oscillators and radio receivers. They can be used to select one frequency when many are present.
- A high Q circuit has good selectivity of frequencies
- A low Q circuit has poor selectivity of frequencies
- Parallel tuned circuit would typically have a
Q
of50