fbpx
Wikipedia

Capacitance

Capacitance is the capability of a material object or device to store electric charge. It is measured by the charge in response to a difference in electric potential, expressed as the ratio of those quantities. Commonly recognized are two closely related notions of capacitance: self capacitance and mutual capacitance.[1]: 237–238  An object that can be electrically charged exhibits self capacitance, for which the electric potential is measured between the object and ground. Mutual capacitance is measured between two components, and is particularly important in the operation of the capacitor, an elementary linear electronic component designed to add capacitance to an electric circuit.

Common symbols
C
SI unitfarad
Other units
μF, nF, pF
In SI base unitsF = A2 s4 kg−1 m−2
Derivations from
other quantities
C = charge / voltage
Dimension

The capacitance between two conductors is a function only of the geometry; the opposing surface area of the conductors and the distance between them, and the permittivity of any dielectric material between them. For many dielectric materials, the permittivity, and thus the capacitance, is independent of the potential difference between the conductors and the total charge on them.

The SI unit of capacitance is the farad (symbol: F), named after the English physicist Michael Faraday. A 1 farad capacitor, when charged with 1 coulomb of electrical charge, has a potential difference of 1 volt between its plates.[2] The reciprocal of capacitance is called elastance.

Self capacitance edit

In discussing electrical circuits, the term capacitance is usually a shorthand for the mutual capacitance between two adjacent conductors, such as the two plates of a capacitor. However, every isolated conductor also exhibits capacitance, here called self capacitance. It is measured by the amount of electric charge that must be added to an isolated conductor to raise its electric potential by one unit of measurement, e.g., one volt.[3] The reference point for this potential is a theoretical hollow conducting sphere, of infinite radius, with the conductor centered inside this sphere.

Self capacitance of a conductor is defined by the ratio of charge and electric potential:

 
where
  •   is the charge held,
  •   is the electric potential,
  •   is the surface charge density,
  •   is an infinitesimal element of area on the surface of the conductor,
  •   is the length from   to a fixed point M on the conductor,
  •   is the vacuum permittivity.

Using this method, the self capacitance of a conducting sphere of radius   in free space (i.e. far away from any other charge distributions) is:[4]

 

Example values of self capacitance are:

The inter-winding capacitance of a coil is sometimes called self capacitance,[6] but this is a different phenomenon. It is actually mutual capacitance between the individual turns of the coil and is a form of stray or parasitic capacitance. This self capacitance is an important consideration at high frequencies: it changes the impedance of the coil and gives rise to parallel resonance. In many applications this is an undesirable effect and sets an upper frequency limit for the correct operation of the circuit.[citation needed]

Mutual capacitance edit

A common form is a parallel-plate capacitor, which consists of two conductive plates insulated from each other, usually sandwiching a dielectric material. In a parallel plate capacitor, capacitance is very nearly proportional to the surface area of the conductor plates and inversely proportional to the separation distance between the plates.

If the charges on the plates are   and  , and   gives the voltage between the plates, then the capacitance   is given by

 
which gives the voltage/current relationship
 
where   is the instantaneous rate of change of voltage, and   is the instantaneous rate of change of the capacitance. For most applications, the change in capacitance over time is negligible, so you can reduce to:
 

The energy stored in a capacitor is found by integrating the work  :

 

Capacitance matrix edit

The discussion above is limited to the case of two conducting plates, although of arbitrary size and shape. The definition   does not apply when there are more than two charged plates, or when the net charge on the two plates is non-zero. To handle this case, James Clerk Maxwell introduced his coefficients of potential. If three (nearly ideal) conductors are given charges  , then the voltage at conductor 1 is given by

 
and similarly for the other voltages. Hermann von Helmholtz and Sir William Thomson showed that the coefficients of potential are symmetric, so that  , etc. Thus the system can be described by a collection of coefficients known as the elastance matrix or reciprocal capacitance matrix, which is defined as:
 

From this, the mutual capacitance   between two objects can be defined[7] by solving for the total charge   and using  .

 

Since no actual device holds perfectly equal and opposite charges on each of the two "plates", it is the mutual capacitance that is reported on capacitors.

The collection of coefficients   is known as the capacitance matrix,[8][9][10] and is the inverse of the elastance matrix.

Capacitors edit

The capacitance of the majority of capacitors used in electronic circuits is generally several orders of magnitude smaller than the farad. The most common units of capacitance are the microfarad (µF), nanofarad (nF), picofarad (pF), and, in microcircuits, femtofarad (fF). Some applications also use supercapacitors that can be much larger, as much as hundreds of farads, and parasitic capacitive elements can be less than a femtofarad. Historical texts use other, obsolete submultiples of the farad, such as "mf" and "mfd" for microfarad (µF); "mmf", "mmfd", "pfd", "µµF" for picofarad (pF).[11][12]

The capacitance can be calculated if the geometry of the conductors and the dielectric properties of the insulator between the conductors are known. Capacitance is proportional to the area of overlap and inversely proportional to the separation between conducting sheets. The closer the sheets are to each other, the greater the capacitance.

An example is the capacitance of a capacitor constructed of two parallel plates both of area   separated by a distance  . If   is sufficiently small with respect to the smallest chord of  , there holds, to a high level of accuracy:

 
 

where

  •   is the capacitance, in farads;
  •   is the area of overlap of the two plates, in square meters;
  •   is the electric constant ( );
  •   is the relative permittivity (also dielectric constant) of the material in between the plates (  for air); and
  •   is the separation between the plates, in meters.

The equation is a good approximation if d is small compared to the other dimensions of the plates so that the electric field in the capacitor area is uniform, and the so-called fringing field around the periphery provides only a small contribution to the capacitance.

Combining the equation for capacitance with the above equation for the energy stored in a capacitor, for a flat-plate capacitor the energy stored is:

 
where   is the energy, in joules;   is the capacitance, in farads; and   is the voltage, in volts.

Stray capacitance edit

Any two adjacent conductors can function as a capacitor, though the capacitance is small unless the conductors are close together for long distances or over a large area. This (often unwanted) capacitance is called parasitic or stray capacitance. Stray capacitance can allow signals to leak between otherwise isolated circuits (an effect called crosstalk), and it can be a limiting factor for proper functioning of circuits at high frequency.

Stray capacitance between the input and output in amplifier circuits can be troublesome because it can form a path for feedback, which can cause instability and parasitic oscillation in the amplifier. It is often convenient for analytical purposes to replace this capacitance with a combination of one input-to-ground capacitance and one output-to-ground capacitance; the original configuration – including the input-to-output capacitance – is often referred to as a pi-configuration. Miller's theorem can be used to effect this replacement: it states that, if the gain ratio of two nodes is 1/K, then an impedance of Z connecting the two nodes can be replaced with a Z/1 − K impedance between the first node and ground and a KZ/K − 1 impedance between the second node and ground. Since impedance varies inversely with capacitance, the internode capacitance, C, is replaced by a capacitance of KC from input to ground and a capacitance of (K − 1)C/K from output to ground. When the input-to-output gain is very large, the equivalent input-to-ground impedance is very small while the output-to-ground impedance is essentially equal to the original (input-to-output) impedance.

Capacitance of conductors with simple shapes edit

Calculating the capacitance of a system amounts to solving the Laplace equation   with a constant potential   on the 2-dimensional surface of the conductors embedded in 3-space. This is simplified by symmetries. There is no solution in terms of elementary functions in more complicated cases.

For plane situations, analytic functions may be used to map different geometries to each other. See also Schwarz–Christoffel mapping.

Capacitance of simple systems
Type Capacitance Comment
Parallel-plate capacitor    
Concentric cylinders    
Eccentric cylinders[13]    
  •  : Permittivity
  •  : Outer radius
  •  : Inner radius
  •  : Distance between center
  •  : Wire length
Pair of parallel wires[14]    
Wire parallel to wall[14]  
  •  : Wire radius
  •  : Distance,  
  •  : Wire length
Two parallel
coplanar strips[15]
 
  •  : Distance
  •  : Length
  •  : Strip width
  •  
      
  •  : Complete elliptic integral of the first kind
Concentric spheres    
Two spheres,
equal radius[16][17]
 
  •  : Radius
  •  : Distance,  
  •  
  •  : Euler's constant
  •  
  •  : the q-digamma function
  •  : the q-Gamma function[18]

See also Basic hypergeometric series.

Sphere in front of wall[16]  
  •  : Radius
  •  : Distance,  
  •  
Sphere  
  •  : Radius
Circular disc[19]  
  •  : Radius
Thin straight wire,
finite length[20][21][22]
 
  •  : Wire radius
  •  : Length
  •  

Energy storage edit

The energy (measured in joules) stored in a capacitor is equal to the work required to push the charges into the capacitor, i.e. to charge it. Consider a capacitor of capacitance C, holding a charge +q on one plate and −q on the other. Moving a small element of charge dq from one plate to the other against the potential difference V = q/C requires the work dW:

 
where W is the work measured in joules, q is the charge measured in coulombs and C is the capacitance, measured in farads.

The energy stored in a capacitor is found by integrating this equation. Starting with an uncharged capacitance (q = 0) and moving charge from one plate to the other until the plates have charge +Q and −Q requires the work W:

 

Nanoscale systems edit

The capacitance of nanoscale dielectric capacitors such as quantum dots may differ from conventional formulations of larger capacitors. In particular, the electrostatic potential difference experienced by electrons in conventional capacitors is spatially well-defined and fixed by the shape and size of metallic electrodes in addition to the statistically large number of electrons present in conventional capacitors. In nanoscale capacitors, however, the electrostatic potentials experienced by electrons are determined by the number and locations of all electrons that contribute to the electronic properties of the device. In such devices, the number of electrons may be very small, so the resulting spatial distribution of equipotential surfaces within the device is exceedingly complex.

Single-electron devices edit

The capacitance of a connected, or "closed", single-electron device is twice the capacitance of an unconnected, or "open", single-electron device.[23] This fact may be traced more fundamentally to the energy stored in the single-electron device whose "direct polarization" interaction energy may be equally divided into the interaction of the electron with the polarized charge on the device itself due to the presence of the electron and the amount of potential energy required to form the polarized charge on the device (the interaction of charges in the device's dielectric material with the potential due to the electron).[24]

Few-electron devices edit

The derivation of a "quantum capacitance" of a few-electron device involves the thermodynamic chemical potential of an N-particle system given by

 

whose energy terms may be obtained as solutions of the Schrödinger equation. The definition of capacitance,

 
with the potential difference
 

may be applied to the device with the addition or removal of individual electrons,

 
and
 

The "quantum capacitance" of the device is then[25]

 

This expression of "quantum capacitance" may be written as

 
which differs from the conventional expression described in the introduction where  , the stored electrostatic potential energy,
 
by a factor of 1/2 with  .

However, within the framework of purely classical electrostatic interactions, the appearance of the factor of 1/2 is the result of integration in the conventional formulation involving the work done when charging a capacitor,

 

which is appropriate since   for systems involving either many electrons or metallic electrodes, but in few-electron systems,  . The integral generally becomes a summation. One may trivially combine the expressions of capacitance

 
and electrostatic interaction energy,
 
to obtain
 

which is similar to the quantum capacitance. A more rigorous derivation is reported in the literature.[26] In particular, to circumvent the mathematical challenges of spatially complex equipotential surfaces within the device, an average electrostatic potential experienced by each electron is utilized in the derivation.

Apparent mathematical differences may be understood more fundamentally. The potential energy,  , of an isolated device (self-capacitance) is twice that stored in a "connected" device in the lower limit N=1. As N grows large,  .[24] Thus, the general expression of capacitance is

 

In nanoscale devices such as quantum dots, the "capacitor" is often an isolated or partially isolated component within the device. The primary differences between nanoscale capacitors and macroscopic (conventional) capacitors are the number of excess electrons (charge carriers, or electrons, that contribute to the device's electronic behavior) and the shape and size of metallic electrodes. In nanoscale devices, nanowires consisting of metal atoms typically do not exhibit the same conductive properties as their macroscopic, or bulk material, counterparts.

Capacitance in electronic and semiconductor devices edit

In electronic and semiconductor devices, transient or frequency-dependent current between terminals contains both conduction and displacement components. Conduction current is related to moving charge carriers (electrons, holes, ions, etc.), while displacement current is caused by a time-varying electric field. Carrier transport is affected by electric fields and by a number of physical phenomena - such as carrier drift and diffusion, trapping, injection, contact-related effects, impact ionization, etc. As a result, device admittance is frequency-dependent, and a simple electrostatic formula for capacitance   is not applicable. A more general definition of capacitance, encompassing electrostatic formula, is:[27]

 
where   is the device admittance, and   is the angular frequency.

In general, capacitance is a function of frequency. At high frequencies, capacitance approaches a constant value, equal to "geometric" capacitance, determined by the terminals' geometry and dielectric content in the device. A paper by Steven Laux[27] presents a review of numerical techniques for capacitance calculation. In particular, capacitance can be calculated by a Fourier transform of a transient current in response to a step-like voltage excitation:

 

Negative capacitance in semiconductor devices edit

Usually, capacitance in semiconductor devices is positive. However, in some devices and under certain conditions (temperature, applied voltages, frequency, etc.), capacitance can become negative. Non-monotonic behavior of the transient current in response to a step-like excitation has been proposed as the mechanism of negative capacitance.[28] Negative capacitance has been demonstrated and explored in many different types of semiconductor devices.[29]

Measuring capacitance edit

A capacitance meter is a piece of electronic test equipment used to measure capacitance, mainly of discrete capacitors. For most purposes and in most cases the capacitor must be disconnected from circuit.

Many DVMs (digital volt meters) have a capacitance-measuring function. These usually operate by charging and discharging the capacitor under test with a known current and measuring the rate of rise of the resulting voltage; the slower the rate of rise, the larger the capacitance. DVMs can usually measure capacitance from nanofarads to a few hundred microfarads, but wider ranges are not unusual. It is also possible to measure capacitance by passing a known high-frequency alternating current through the device under test and measuring the resulting voltage across it (does not work for polarised capacitors).

 
An Andeen-Hagerling 2700A capacitance bridge

More sophisticated instruments use other techniques such as inserting the capacitor-under-test into a bridge circuit. By varying the values of the other legs in the bridge (so as to bring the bridge into balance), the value of the unknown capacitor is determined. This method of indirect use of measuring capacitance ensures greater precision. Through the use of Kelvin connections and other careful design techniques, these instruments can usually measure capacitors over a range from picofarads to farads.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Harrington, Roger F. (2003). Introduction to Electromagnetic Engineering (1st ed.). Dover Publications. p. 43. ISBN 0-486-43241-6.
  2. ^ "Definition of 'farad'". Collins.
  3. ^ William D. Greason (1992). Electrostatic discharge in electronics. Research Studies Press. p. 48. ISBN 978-0-86380-136-5.
  4. ^ (PDF). University of New South Wales. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 February 2009.
  5. ^ Tipler, Paul; Mosca, Gene (2004). Physics for Scientists and Engineers (5th ed.). Macmillan. p. 752. ISBN 978-0-7167-0810-0.
  6. ^ Massarini, A.; Kazimierczuk, M. K. (1997). "Self capacitance of inductors". IEEE Transactions on Power Electronics. 12 (4): 671–676. Bibcode:1997ITPE...12..671M. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.205.7356. doi:10.1109/63.602562: example of the use of the term 'self capacitance'.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  7. ^ Jackson, John David (1999). Classical Electrodynamic (3rd ed.). John Wiley & Sons. p. 43. ISBN 978-0-471-30932-1.
  8. ^ Maxwell, James (1873). "3". A treatise on electricity and magnetism. Vol. 1. Clarendon Press. p. 88ff.
  9. ^ "Capacitance: Charge as a Function of Voltage". Av8n.com. Retrieved 20 September 2010.
  10. ^ Smolić, Ivica; Klajn, Bruno (2021). "Capacitance matrix revisited". Progress in Electromagnetics Research B. 92: 1–18. arXiv:2007.10251. doi:10.2528/PIERB21011501. Retrieved 4 May 2021.
  11. ^ "Capacitor MF-MMFD Conversion Chart". Just Radios.
  12. ^ Fundamentals of Electronics. Vol. 1b – Basic Electricity – Alternating Current. Bureau of Naval Personnel. 1965. p. 197.
  13. ^ Dawes, Chester L. (1973). "Capacitance and potential gradients of eccentric cylindrical condensers". Physics. 4 (2): 81–85. doi:10.1063/1.1745162.
  14. ^ a b Jackson, J. D. (1975). Classical Electrodynamics. Wiley. p. 80.
  15. ^ Binns; Lawrenson (1973). Analysis and computation of electric and magnetic field problems. Pergamon Press. ISBN 978-0-08-016638-4.
  16. ^ a b Maxwell, J.;C. (1873). A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism. Dover. p. 266 ff. ISBN 978-0-486-60637-8.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  17. ^ Rawlins, A.D. (1985). "Note on the capacitance of two closely separated spheres". IMA Journal of Applied Mathematics. 34 (1): 119–120. doi:10.1093/imamat/34.1.119.
  18. ^ Gasper; Rahman (2004). Basic Hypergeometric Series. Cambridge University Press. p.20-22. ISBN 978-0-521-83357-8.
  19. ^ Jackson, J.D. (1975). Classical Electrodynamics. Wiley. p. 128, problem  3.3.
  20. ^ Maxwell, J. C. (1878). "On the electrical capacity of a long narrow cylinder and of a disk of sensible thickness". Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society. IX: 94–101. doi:10.1112/plms/s1-9.1.94.
  21. ^ Vainshtein, L. A. (1962). "Static boundary problems for a hollow cylinder of finite length. III Approximate formulas". Zhurnal Tekhnicheskoi Fiziki. 32: 1165–1173.
  22. ^ Jackson, J. D. (2000). "Charge density on thin straight wire, revisited". American Journal of Physics. 68 (9): 789–799. Bibcode:2000AmJPh..68..789J. doi:10.1119/1.1302908.
  23. ^ Raphael Tsu (2011). Superlattice to Nanoelectronics. Elsevier. pp. 312–315. ISBN 978-0-08-096813-1.
  24. ^ a b T. LaFave Jr. (2011). "Discrete charge dielectric model of electrostatic energy". J. Electrostatics. 69 (6): 414–418. arXiv:1203.3798. doi:10.1016/j.elstat.2011.06.006. S2CID 94822190.
  25. ^ G. J. Iafrate; K. Hess; J. B. Krieger; M. Macucci (1995). "Capacitive nature of atomic-sized structures". Phys. Rev. B. 52 (15): 10737–10739. Bibcode:1995PhRvB..5210737I. doi:10.1103/physrevb.52.10737. PMID 9980157.
  26. ^ T. LaFave Jr; R. Tsu (March–April 2008). (PDF). Microelectronics Journal. 39 (3–4): 617–623. doi:10.1016/j.mejo.2007.07.105. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 February 2014. Retrieved 12 February 2014.
  27. ^ a b Laux, S.E. (October 1985). "Techniques for small-signal analysis of semiconductor devices". IEEE Transactions on Computer-Aided Design of Integrated Circuits and Systems. 4 (4): 472–481. doi:10.1109/TCAD.1985.1270145. S2CID 13058472.
  28. ^ Jonscher, A.K. (1986). "The physical origin of negative capacitance". J. Chem. Soc. Faraday Trans. II. 82: 75–81. doi:10.1039/F29868200075.
  29. ^ Ershov, M.; Liu, H.C.; Li, L.; Buchanan, M.; Wasilewski, Z.R.; Jonscher, A.K. (October 1998). "Negative capacitance effect in semiconductor devices". IEEE Trans. Electron Devices. 45 (10): 2196–2206. arXiv:cond-mat/9806145. Bibcode:1998ITED...45.2196E. doi:10.1109/16.725254. S2CID 204925581.

Further reading edit

  • Tipler, Paul (1998). Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Vol. 2: Electricity and Magnetism, Light (4th ed.). W. H. Freeman. ISBN 1-57259-492-6
  • Serway, Raymond; Jewett, John (2003). Physics for Scientists and Engineers (6th ed.). Brooks Cole. ISBN 0-534-40842-7
  • Saslow, Wayne M.(2002). Electricity, Magnetism, and Light. Thomson Learning. ISBN 0-12-619455-6. See Chapter 8, and especially pp. 255–259 for coefficients of potential.

capacitance, capacitance, blood, vessels, compliance, physiology, capability, material, object, device, store, electric, charge, measured, charge, response, difference, electric, potential, expressed, ratio, those, quantities, commonly, recognized, closely, re. For capacitance of blood vessels see Compliance physiology Capacitance is the capability of a material object or device to store electric charge It is measured by the charge in response to a difference in electric potential expressed as the ratio of those quantities Commonly recognized are two closely related notions of capacitance self capacitance and mutual capacitance 1 237 238 An object that can be electrically charged exhibits self capacitance for which the electric potential is measured between the object and ground Mutual capacitance is measured between two components and is particularly important in the operation of the capacitor an elementary linear electronic component designed to add capacitance to an electric circuit Common symbolsCSI unitfaradOther unitsmF nF pFIn SI base unitsF A2 s4 kg 1 m 2Derivations fromother quantitiesC charge voltageDimensionL 2 M 1 T 4 I 2 displaystyle mathsf L 2 mathsf M 1 mathsf T 4 mathsf I 2 The capacitance between two conductors is a function only of the geometry the opposing surface area of the conductors and the distance between them and the permittivity of any dielectric material between them For many dielectric materials the permittivity and thus the capacitance is independent of the potential difference between the conductors and the total charge on them The SI unit of capacitance is the farad symbol F named after the English physicist Michael Faraday A 1 farad capacitor when charged with 1 coulomb of electrical charge has a potential difference of 1 volt between its plates 2 The reciprocal of capacitance is called elastance Contents 1 Self capacitance 2 Mutual capacitance 2 1 Capacitance matrix 3 Capacitors 4 Stray capacitance 5 Capacitance of conductors with simple shapes 6 Energy storage 7 Nanoscale systems 7 1 Single electron devices 7 2 Few electron devices 8 Capacitance in electronic and semiconductor devices 9 Negative capacitance in semiconductor devices 10 Measuring capacitance 11 See also 12 References 13 Further readingSelf capacitance editIn discussing electrical circuits the term capacitance is usually a shorthand for the mutual capacitance between two adjacent conductors such as the two plates of a capacitor However every isolated conductor also exhibits capacitance here called self capacitance It is measured by the amount of electric charge that must be added to an isolated conductor to raise its electric potential by one unit of measurement e g one volt 3 The reference point for this potential is a theoretical hollow conducting sphere of infinite radius with the conductor centered inside this sphere Self capacitance of a conductor is defined by the ratio of charge and electric potential C q V displaystyle C frac q V nbsp where q textstyle q nbsp is the charge held V 1 4 p e 0 s r d S textstyle V frac 1 4 pi varepsilon 0 int frac sigma r dS nbsp is the electric potential s textstyle sigma nbsp is the surface charge density d S textstyle dS nbsp is an infinitesimal element of area on the surface of the conductor r textstyle r nbsp is the length from d S textstyle dS nbsp to a fixed point M on the conductor e 0 displaystyle varepsilon 0 nbsp is the vacuum permittivity Using this method the self capacitance of a conducting sphere of radius R textstyle R nbsp in free space i e far away from any other charge distributions is 4 C 4 p e 0 R displaystyle C 4 pi varepsilon 0 R nbsp Example values of self capacitance are for the top plate of a van de Graaff generator typically a sphere 20 cm in radius 22 24 pF the planet Earth about 710 µF 5 The inter winding capacitance of a coil is sometimes called self capacitance 6 but this is a different phenomenon It is actually mutual capacitance between the individual turns of the coil and is a form of stray or parasitic capacitance This self capacitance is an important consideration at high frequencies it changes the impedance of the coil and gives rise to parallel resonance In many applications this is an undesirable effect and sets an upper frequency limit for the correct operation of the circuit citation needed Mutual capacitance editA common form is a parallel plate capacitor which consists of two conductive plates insulated from each other usually sandwiching a dielectric material In a parallel plate capacitor capacitance is very nearly proportional to the surface area of the conductor plates and inversely proportional to the separation distance between the plates If the charges on the plates are q textstyle q nbsp and q textstyle q nbsp and V textstyle V nbsp gives the voltage between the plates then the capacitance C textstyle C nbsp is given byC q V displaystyle C frac q V nbsp which gives the voltage current relationship i t C d v t d t V d C d t displaystyle i t C frac dv t dt V frac dC dt nbsp where d v t d t textstyle frac dv t dt nbsp is the instantaneous rate of change of voltage and d C d t textstyle frac dC dt nbsp is the instantaneous rate of change of the capacitance For most applications the change in capacitance over time is negligible so you can reduce to i t C d v t d t displaystyle i t C frac dv t dt nbsp The energy stored in a capacitor is found by integrating the work W textstyle W nbsp W charging 1 2 C V 2 displaystyle W text charging frac 1 2 CV 2 nbsp Capacitance matrix edit The discussion above is limited to the case of two conducting plates although of arbitrary size and shape The definition C Q V displaystyle C Q V nbsp does not apply when there are more than two charged plates or when the net charge on the two plates is non zero To handle this case James Clerk Maxwell introduced his coefficients of potential If three nearly ideal conductors are given charges Q 1 Q 2 Q 3 displaystyle Q 1 Q 2 Q 3 nbsp then the voltage at conductor 1 is given byV 1 P 11 Q 1 P 12 Q 2 P 13 Q 3 displaystyle V 1 P 11 Q 1 P 12 Q 2 P 13 Q 3 nbsp and similarly for the other voltages Hermann von Helmholtz and Sir William Thomson showed that the coefficients of potential are symmetric so that P 12 P 21 displaystyle P 12 P 21 nbsp etc Thus the system can be described by a collection of coefficients known as the elastance matrix or reciprocal capacitance matrix which is defined as P i j V i Q j displaystyle P ij frac partial V i partial Q j nbsp From this the mutual capacitance C m displaystyle C m nbsp between two objects can be defined 7 by solving for the total charge Q textstyle Q nbsp and using C m Q V displaystyle C m Q V nbsp C m 1 P 11 P 22 P 12 P 21 displaystyle C m frac 1 P 11 P 22 P 12 P 21 nbsp Since no actual device holds perfectly equal and opposite charges on each of the two plates it is the mutual capacitance that is reported on capacitors The collection of coefficients C i j Q i V j displaystyle C ij frac partial Q i partial V j nbsp is known as the capacitance matrix 8 9 10 and is the inverse of the elastance matrix Capacitors editMain article Capacitor The capacitance of the majority of capacitors used in electronic circuits is generally several orders of magnitude smaller than the farad The most common units of capacitance are the microfarad µF nanofarad nF picofarad pF and in microcircuits femtofarad fF Some applications also use supercapacitors that can be much larger as much as hundreds of farads and parasitic capacitive elements can be less than a femtofarad Historical texts use other obsolete submultiples of the farad such as mf and mfd for microfarad µF mmf mmfd pfd µµF for picofarad pF 11 12 The capacitance can be calculated if the geometry of the conductors and the dielectric properties of the insulator between the conductors are known Capacitance is proportional to the area of overlap and inversely proportional to the separation between conducting sheets The closer the sheets are to each other the greater the capacitance An example is the capacitance of a capacitor constructed of two parallel plates both of area A textstyle A nbsp separated by a distance d textstyle d nbsp If d textstyle d nbsp is sufficiently small with respect to the smallest chord of A textstyle A nbsp there holds to a high level of accuracy C e A d displaystyle C varepsilon frac A d nbsp e e 0 e r displaystyle varepsilon varepsilon 0 varepsilon r nbsp where C textstyle C nbsp is the capacitance in farads A textstyle A nbsp is the area of overlap of the two plates in square meters e 0 textstyle varepsilon 0 nbsp is the electric constant e 0 8 854 10 12 F m 1 textstyle varepsilon 0 approx 8 854 times 10 12 mathrm F cdot m 1 nbsp e r textstyle varepsilon r nbsp is the relative permittivity also dielectric constant of the material in between the plates e r 1 textstyle varepsilon r approx 1 nbsp for air and d textstyle d nbsp is the separation between the plates in meters The equation is a good approximation if d is small compared to the other dimensions of the plates so that the electric field in the capacitor area is uniform and the so called fringing field around the periphery provides only a small contribution to the capacitance Combining the equation for capacitance with the above equation for the energy stored in a capacitor for a flat plate capacitor the energy stored is W stored 1 2 C V 2 1 2 e A d V 2 displaystyle W text stored frac 1 2 CV 2 frac 1 2 varepsilon frac A d V 2 nbsp where W textstyle W nbsp is the energy in joules C textstyle C nbsp is the capacitance in farads and V textstyle V nbsp is the voltage in volts Stray capacitance editMain article Parasitic capacitance Any two adjacent conductors can function as a capacitor though the capacitance is small unless the conductors are close together for long distances or over a large area This often unwanted capacitance is called parasitic or stray capacitance Stray capacitance can allow signals to leak between otherwise isolated circuits an effect called crosstalk and it can be a limiting factor for proper functioning of circuits at high frequency Stray capacitance between the input and output in amplifier circuits can be troublesome because it can form a path for feedback which can cause instability and parasitic oscillation in the amplifier It is often convenient for analytical purposes to replace this capacitance with a combination of one input to ground capacitance and one output to ground capacitance the original configuration including the input to output capacitance is often referred to as a pi configuration Miller s theorem can be used to effect this replacement it states that if the gain ratio of two nodes is 1 K then an impedance of Z connecting the two nodes can be replaced with a Z 1 K impedance between the first node and ground and a KZ K 1 impedance between the second node and ground Since impedance varies inversely with capacitance the internode capacitance C is replaced by a capacitance of KC from input to ground and a capacitance of K 1 C K from output to ground When the input to output gain is very large the equivalent input to ground impedance is very small while the output to ground impedance is essentially equal to the original input to output impedance Capacitance of conductors with simple shapes editCalculating the capacitance of a system amounts to solving the Laplace equation 2 f 0 textstyle nabla 2 varphi 0 nbsp with a constant potential f textstyle varphi nbsp on the 2 dimensional surface of the conductors embedded in 3 space This is simplified by symmetries There is no solution in terms of elementary functions in more complicated cases For plane situations analytic functions may be used to map different geometries to each other See also Schwarz Christoffel mapping Capacitance of simple systems Type Capacitance CommentParallel plate capacitor C e A d displaystyle mathcal C frac varepsilon A d nbsp nbsp e textstyle varepsilon nbsp PermittivityConcentric cylinders C 2 p e ℓ ln R 2 R 1 displaystyle mathcal C frac 2 pi varepsilon ell ln left R 2 R 1 right nbsp nbsp e textstyle varepsilon nbsp PermittivityEccentric cylinders 13 C 2 p e ℓ arcosh R 1 2 R 2 2 d 2 2 R 1 R 2 displaystyle mathcal C frac 2 pi varepsilon ell operatorname arcosh left frac R 1 2 R 2 2 d 2 2R 1 R 2 right nbsp nbsp e textstyle varepsilon nbsp Permittivity R 1 textstyle R 1 nbsp Outer radius R 2 textstyle R 2 nbsp Inner radius d textstyle d nbsp Distance between center ℓ textstyle ell nbsp Wire lengthPair of parallel wires 14 C p e ℓ arcosh d 2 a p e ℓ ln d 2 a d 2 4 a 2 1 displaystyle mathcal C frac pi varepsilon ell operatorname arcosh left frac d 2a right frac pi varepsilon ell ln left frac d 2a sqrt frac d 2 4a 2 1 right nbsp nbsp Wire parallel to wall 14 C 2 p e ℓ arcosh d a 2 p e ℓ ln d a d 2 a 2 1 displaystyle mathcal C frac 2 pi varepsilon ell operatorname arcosh left frac d a right frac 2 pi varepsilon ell ln left frac d a sqrt frac d 2 a 2 1 right nbsp a textstyle a nbsp Wire radius d textstyle d nbsp Distance d gt a textstyle d gt a nbsp ℓ textstyle ell nbsp Wire lengthTwo parallelcoplanar strips 15 C e ℓ K 1 k 2 K k displaystyle mathcal C varepsilon ell frac K left sqrt 1 k 2 right K left k right nbsp d textstyle d nbsp Distance ℓ textstyle ell nbsp Length w 1 w 2 textstyle w 1 w 2 nbsp Strip width k 1 2 w 1 d 1 1 textstyle k 1 left tfrac 2w 1 d 1 right 1 nbsp k 2 2 w 2 d 1 1 displaystyle k 2 left tfrac 2w 2 d 1 right 1 nbsp k k 1 k 2 displaystyle k sqrt k 1 k 2 nbsp K textstyle K nbsp Complete elliptic integral of the first kindConcentric spheres C 4 p e 1 R 1 1 R 2 displaystyle mathcal C frac 4 pi varepsilon frac 1 R 1 frac 1 R 2 nbsp nbsp e textstyle varepsilon nbsp PermittivityTwo spheres equal radius 16 17 C 2 p e a n 1 sinh ln D D 2 1 sinh n ln D D 2 1 2 p e a 1 1 2 D 1 4 D 2 1 8 D 3 1 8 D 4 3 32 D 5 O 1 D 6 2 p e a ln 2 g 1 2 ln 2 D 2 O 2 D 2 2 p e a D 2 1 log q ps q 1 i p log q i p ps q 1 displaystyle begin aligned mathcal C amp 2 pi varepsilon a sum n 1 infty frac sinh left ln left D sqrt D 2 1 right right sinh left n ln left D sqrt D 2 1 right right amp 2 pi varepsilon a left 1 frac 1 2D frac 1 4D 2 frac 1 8D 3 frac 1 8D 4 frac 3 32D 5 mathcal O left frac 1 D 6 right right amp 2 pi varepsilon a left ln 2 gamma frac 1 2 ln left 2D 2 right mathcal O left 2D 2 right right amp 2 pi varepsilon a frac sqrt D 2 1 log q left psi q left 1 frac i pi log q right i pi psi q 1 right end aligned nbsp a textstyle a nbsp Radius d textstyle d nbsp Distance d gt 2 a textstyle d gt 2a nbsp D d 2 a D gt 1 textstyle D d 2a D gt 1 nbsp g textstyle gamma nbsp Euler s constant q D D 2 1 displaystyle q D sqrt D 2 1 nbsp ps q z z G q z G q z displaystyle psi q z frac partial z Gamma q z Gamma q z nbsp the q digamma function G q z displaystyle Gamma q z nbsp the q Gamma function 18 See also Basic hypergeometric series Sphere in front of wall 16 C 4 p e a n 1 sinh ln D D 2 1 sinh n ln D D 2 1 displaystyle mathcal C 4 pi varepsilon a sum n 1 infty frac sinh left ln left D sqrt D 2 1 right right sinh left n ln left D sqrt D 2 1 right right nbsp a displaystyle a nbsp Radius d displaystyle d nbsp Distance d gt a displaystyle d gt a nbsp D d a displaystyle D d a nbsp Sphere C 4 p e a displaystyle mathcal C 4 pi varepsilon a nbsp a displaystyle a nbsp RadiusCircular disc 19 C 8 e a displaystyle mathcal C 8 varepsilon a nbsp a displaystyle a nbsp RadiusThin straight wire finite length 20 21 22 C 2 p e ℓ L 1 1 L 1 ln 2 1 L 2 1 1 ln 2 2 p 2 12 O 1 L 3 displaystyle mathcal C frac 2 pi varepsilon ell Lambda left 1 frac 1 Lambda left 1 ln 2 right frac 1 Lambda 2 left 1 left 1 ln 2 right 2 frac pi 2 12 right mathcal O left frac 1 Lambda 3 right right nbsp a displaystyle a nbsp Wire radius ℓ displaystyle ell nbsp Length L ln ℓ a displaystyle Lambda ln left ell a right nbsp Energy storage editThe energy measured in joules stored in a capacitor is equal to the work required to push the charges into the capacitor i e to charge it Consider a capacitor of capacitance C holding a charge q on one plate and q on the other Moving a small element of charge dq from one plate to the other against the potential difference V q C requires the work dW d W q C d q displaystyle mathrm d W frac q C mathrm d q nbsp where W is the work measured in joules q is the charge measured in coulombs and C is the capacitance measured in farads The energy stored in a capacitor is found by integrating this equation Starting with an uncharged capacitance q 0 and moving charge from one plate to the other until the plates have charge Q and Q requires the work W W charging 0 Q q C d q 1 2 Q 2 C 1 2 Q V 1 2 C V 2 W stored displaystyle W text charging int 0 Q frac q C mathrm d q frac 1 2 frac Q 2 C frac 1 2 QV frac 1 2 CV 2 W text stored nbsp Nanoscale systems editThe capacitance of nanoscale dielectric capacitors such as quantum dots may differ from conventional formulations of larger capacitors In particular the electrostatic potential difference experienced by electrons in conventional capacitors is spatially well defined and fixed by the shape and size of metallic electrodes in addition to the statistically large number of electrons present in conventional capacitors In nanoscale capacitors however the electrostatic potentials experienced by electrons are determined by the number and locations of all electrons that contribute to the electronic properties of the device In such devices the number of electrons may be very small so the resulting spatial distribution of equipotential surfaces within the device is exceedingly complex Single electron devices edit The capacitance of a connected or closed single electron device is twice the capacitance of an unconnected or open single electron device 23 This fact may be traced more fundamentally to the energy stored in the single electron device whose direct polarization interaction energy may be equally divided into the interaction of the electron with the polarized charge on the device itself due to the presence of the electron and the amount of potential energy required to form the polarized charge on the device the interaction of charges in the device s dielectric material with the potential due to the electron 24 Few electron devices edit The derivation of a quantum capacitance of a few electron device involves the thermodynamic chemical potential of an N particle system given bym N U N U N 1 displaystyle mu N U N U N 1 nbsp whose energy terms may be obtained as solutions of the Schrodinger equation The definition of capacitance 1 C D V D Q displaystyle 1 over C equiv Delta V over Delta Q nbsp with the potential difference D V D m e m N D N m N e displaystyle Delta V Delta mu over e mu N Delta N mu N over e nbsp may be applied to the device with the addition or removal of individual electrons D N 1 displaystyle Delta N 1 nbsp and D Q e displaystyle Delta Q e nbsp The quantum capacitance of the device is then 25 C Q N e 2 m N 1 m N e 2 E N displaystyle C Q N frac e 2 mu N 1 mu N frac e 2 E N nbsp This expression of quantum capacitance may be written asC Q N e 2 U N displaystyle C Q N e 2 over U N nbsp which differs from the conventional expression described in the introduction where W stored U displaystyle W text stored U nbsp the stored electrostatic potential energy C Q 2 2 U displaystyle C Q 2 over 2U nbsp by a factor of 1 2 with Q N e displaystyle Q Ne nbsp However within the framework of purely classical electrostatic interactions the appearance of the factor of 1 2 is the result of integration in the conventional formulation involving the work done when charging a capacitor W charging U 0 Q q C d q displaystyle W text charging U int 0 Q frac q C mathrm d q nbsp which is appropriate since d q 0 displaystyle mathrm d q 0 nbsp for systems involving either many electrons or metallic electrodes but in few electron systems d q D Q e displaystyle mathrm d q to Delta Q e nbsp The integral generally becomes a summation One may trivially combine the expressions of capacitanceQ C V displaystyle Q CV nbsp and electrostatic interaction energy U Q V displaystyle U QV nbsp to obtain C Q 1 V Q Q U Q 2 U displaystyle C Q 1 over V Q Q over U Q 2 over U nbsp which is similar to the quantum capacitance A more rigorous derivation is reported in the literature 26 In particular to circumvent the mathematical challenges of spatially complex equipotential surfaces within the device an average electrostatic potential experienced by each electron is utilized in the derivation Apparent mathematical differences may be understood more fundamentally The potential energy U N displaystyle U N nbsp of an isolated device self capacitance is twice that stored in a connected device in the lower limit N 1 As N grows large U N U displaystyle U N to U nbsp 24 Thus the general expression of capacitance isC N N e 2 U N displaystyle C N Ne 2 over U N nbsp In nanoscale devices such as quantum dots the capacitor is often an isolated or partially isolated component within the device The primary differences between nanoscale capacitors and macroscopic conventional capacitors are the number of excess electrons charge carriers or electrons that contribute to the device s electronic behavior and the shape and size of metallic electrodes In nanoscale devices nanowires consisting of metal atoms typically do not exhibit the same conductive properties as their macroscopic or bulk material counterparts Capacitance in electronic and semiconductor devices editIn electronic and semiconductor devices transient or frequency dependent current between terminals contains both conduction and displacement components Conduction current is related to moving charge carriers electrons holes ions etc while displacement current is caused by a time varying electric field Carrier transport is affected by electric fields and by a number of physical phenomena such as carrier drift and diffusion trapping injection contact related effects impact ionization etc As a result device admittance is frequency dependent and a simple electrostatic formula for capacitance C q V displaystyle C q V nbsp is not applicable A more general definition of capacitance encompassing electrostatic formula is 27 C Im Y w w displaystyle C frac operatorname Im Y omega omega nbsp where Y w displaystyle Y omega nbsp is the device admittance and w displaystyle omega nbsp is the angular frequency In general capacitance is a function of frequency At high frequencies capacitance approaches a constant value equal to geometric capacitance determined by the terminals geometry and dielectric content in the device A paper by Steven Laux 27 presents a review of numerical techniques for capacitance calculation In particular capacitance can be calculated by a Fourier transform of a transient current in response to a step like voltage excitation C w 1 D V 0 i t i cos w t d t displaystyle C omega frac 1 Delta V int 0 infty i t i infty cos omega t dt nbsp Negative capacitance in semiconductor devices editUsually capacitance in semiconductor devices is positive However in some devices and under certain conditions temperature applied voltages frequency etc capacitance can become negative Non monotonic behavior of the transient current in response to a step like excitation has been proposed as the mechanism of negative capacitance 28 Negative capacitance has been demonstrated and explored in many different types of semiconductor devices 29 Measuring capacitance editMain article Capacitance meter A capacitance meter is a piece of electronic test equipment used to measure capacitance mainly of discrete capacitors For most purposes and in most cases the capacitor must be disconnected from circuit Many DVMs digital volt meters have a capacitance measuring function These usually operate by charging and discharging the capacitor under test with a known current and measuring the rate of rise of the resulting voltage the slower the rate of rise the larger the capacitance DVMs can usually measure capacitance from nanofarads to a few hundred microfarads but wider ranges are not unusual It is also possible to measure capacitance by passing a known high frequency alternating current through the device under test and measuring the resulting voltage across it does not work for polarised capacitors nbsp An Andeen Hagerling 2700A capacitance bridgeMore sophisticated instruments use other techniques such as inserting the capacitor under test into a bridge circuit By varying the values of the other legs in the bridge so as to bring the bridge into balance the value of the unknown capacitor is determined This method of indirect use of measuring capacitance ensures greater precision Through the use of Kelvin connections and other careful design techniques these instruments can usually measure capacitors over a range from picofarads to farads See also editCapacitive displacement sensor Capacity of a set Displacement current Gauss law LCR meter Magnetocapacitance Quantum capacitanceReferences edit Harrington Roger F 2003 Introduction to Electromagnetic Engineering 1st ed Dover Publications p 43 ISBN 0 486 43241 6 Definition of farad Collins William D Greason 1992 Electrostatic discharge in electronics Research Studies Press p 48 ISBN 978 0 86380 136 5 Lecture notes Capacitance and Dieletrics PDF University of New South Wales Archived from the original PDF on 26 February 2009 Tipler Paul Mosca Gene 2004 Physics for Scientists and Engineers 5th ed Macmillan p 752 ISBN 978 0 7167 0810 0 Massarini A Kazimierczuk M K 1997 Self capacitance of inductors IEEE Transactions on Power Electronics 12 4 671 676 Bibcode 1997ITPE 12 671M CiteSeerX 10 1 1 205 7356 doi 10 1109 63 602562 example of the use of the term self capacitance a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint postscript link Jackson John David 1999 Classical Electrodynamic 3rd ed John Wiley amp Sons p 43 ISBN 978 0 471 30932 1 Maxwell James 1873 3 A treatise on electricity and magnetism Vol 1 Clarendon Press p 88ff Capacitance Charge as a Function of Voltage Av8n com Retrieved 20 September 2010 Smolic Ivica Klajn Bruno 2021 Capacitance matrix revisited Progress in Electromagnetics Research B 92 1 18 arXiv 2007 10251 doi 10 2528 PIERB21011501 Retrieved 4 May 2021 Capacitor MF MMFD Conversion Chart Just Radios Fundamentals of Electronics Vol 1b Basic Electricity Alternating Current Bureau of Naval Personnel 1965 p 197 Dawes Chester L 1973 Capacitance and potential gradients of eccentric cylindrical condensers Physics 4 2 81 85 doi 10 1063 1 1745162 a b Jackson J D 1975 Classical Electrodynamics Wiley p 80 Binns Lawrenson 1973 Analysis and computation of electric and magnetic field problems Pergamon Press ISBN 978 0 08 016638 4 a b Maxwell J C 1873 A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism Dover p 266 ff ISBN 978 0 486 60637 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Rawlins A D 1985 Note on the capacitance of two closely separated spheres IMA Journal of Applied Mathematics 34 1 119 120 doi 10 1093 imamat 34 1 119 Gasper Rahman 2004 Basic Hypergeometric Series Cambridge University Press p 20 22 ISBN 978 0 521 83357 8 Jackson J D 1975 Classical Electrodynamics Wiley p 128 problem 3 3 Maxwell J C 1878 On the electrical capacity of a long narrow cylinder and of a disk of sensible thickness Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society IX 94 101 doi 10 1112 plms s1 9 1 94 Vainshtein L A 1962 Static boundary problems for a hollow cylinder of finite length III Approximate formulas Zhurnal Tekhnicheskoi Fiziki 32 1165 1173 Jackson J D 2000 Charge density on thin straight wire revisited American Journal of Physics 68 9 789 799 Bibcode 2000AmJPh 68 789J doi 10 1119 1 1302908 Raphael Tsu 2011 Superlattice to Nanoelectronics Elsevier pp 312 315 ISBN 978 0 08 096813 1 a b T LaFave Jr 2011 Discrete charge dielectric model of electrostatic energy J Electrostatics 69 6 414 418 arXiv 1203 3798 doi 10 1016 j elstat 2011 06 006 S2CID 94822190 G J Iafrate K Hess J B Krieger M Macucci 1995 Capacitive nature of atomic sized structures Phys Rev B 52 15 10737 10739 Bibcode 1995PhRvB 5210737I doi 10 1103 physrevb 52 10737 PMID 9980157 T LaFave Jr R Tsu March April 2008 Capacitance A property of nanoscale materials based on spatial symmetry of discrete electrons PDF Microelectronics Journal 39 3 4 617 623 doi 10 1016 j mejo 2007 07 105 Archived from the original PDF on 22 February 2014 Retrieved 12 February 2014 a b Laux S E October 1985 Techniques for small signal analysis of semiconductor devices IEEE Transactions on Computer Aided Design of Integrated Circuits and Systems 4 4 472 481 doi 10 1109 TCAD 1985 1270145 S2CID 13058472 Jonscher A K 1986 The physical origin of negative capacitance J Chem Soc Faraday Trans II 82 75 81 doi 10 1039 F29868200075 Ershov M Liu H C Li L Buchanan M Wasilewski Z R Jonscher A K October 1998 Negative capacitance effect in semiconductor devices IEEE Trans Electron Devices 45 10 2196 2206 arXiv cond mat 9806145 Bibcode 1998ITED 45 2196E doi 10 1109 16 725254 S2CID 204925581 Further reading editTipler Paul 1998 Physics for Scientists and Engineers Vol 2 Electricity and Magnetism Light 4th ed W H Freeman ISBN 1 57259 492 6 Serway Raymond Jewett John 2003 Physics for Scientists and Engineers 6th ed Brooks Cole ISBN 0 534 40842 7 Saslow Wayne M 2002 Electricity Magnetism and Light Thomson Learning ISBN 0 12 619455 6 See Chapter 8 and especially pp 255 259 for coefficients of potential Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Capacitance amp oldid 1181612072, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.