Showing posts with label Capacitance micro Farad nano pica series parallel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Capacitance micro Farad nano pica series parallel. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Capacitance - taking things on a step further

Countdown Timer: 7 weeks 6 days to go

You remember we touched on capacitors, and storing charge, and bin lorries? That was just over two weeks ago - read it here if you need to refresh your memory. Well now we're going to take things on a step.

I learned a very valuable lesson in Brian's QTH on Monday night which has helped me solve some capacitance questions quite easily. Here it is, so read carefully and take it in:

With resistors, when in series add them up, when in parallel, its R1xR2/R1+R2. Got that? Basic Ohm's law stuff.

Well, with capacitors, it's the OPPOSITE!

When in series, its C1xC2/C1+C2

And when in parallel, you add their values.

This basic knowledge helped me answer another question on the Sample Paper, which I present below:


We see that capacitors C2 and C3 are in series, so we need to work out their overall capacitance by using: C2xC3 / C2+C3 = 20x20/20+20 = 400/40 = 10. So 10 nF is the overall capacitance of C2 and C3. They are in parallel with C1, so we just add 10 to the value of C1, which is 5 nF, giving 15 nF.

So B - 15 nF - is the correct answer.

I now have in my possession another book, called "towards the Radio Amateurs' Examination" by John Bowyer, published by Stam Press Limited. I tried the 10 questions on capacitance and excelled myself by getting 9 out of 10 or 90%. I will give some examples here.

1. The parallel plates of a capacitor are separated by 2mm of air. If this separation is increased to 4mm, the new value of capacitance will be:

a four times the original capacitance
b double the original capacitance
c one-half the original capacitance
d one-quarter the original capacitance

I knew, having read it, that the capacitance reduces as the distance between the plates increases, but this is actually expressed in the formula:

Capacitance of a capacitor = permittivity x plate area / distance between plates

otherwise expressed as 1 / distance between plates

Therefore, if the distance is doubled, then C must be halved. So the answer is (c).

2. Two capacitors, of value 10 µF and 40 µF respectively, are connected in series. An equivalent capacitor will have a value of:

a 8 µF
b 30 µF
c 50 µF
d 400 µF

Remember that with capacitors it's the opposite to resistors, so when capacitors are in series, we use C1xC2/C1+C2, so 10x40/10+40 = 400/50 = 8.

The answer is (a) 8 µF !