184_notes:examples:week7_cylindrical_capacitor

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Find the capacitance of a cylindrical capacitor. The structure of the capacitor is a cylindrical shell inside another cylindrical shell. The two shells become oppositely charged when the capacitor is connected to a power source. The length of the cylinders is L, and their radii are a and b, with a<b.

Facts

  • The length is L
  • The inner radius is a, and the outer radius is b.
  • The two cylinders are shells, so all charge will accumulate on the surface.

Lacking

  • Capacitance

Approximations & Assumptions

  • The cylinders are much longer than they are far from one another, i.e., L>>a,b.

Representations

  • We represent the situation below.

Cylindrical Capacitor

Let's start with node A. Incoming current is I1, and outgoing current is I2. How do we decide if IAB is incoming or outgoing? We need to bring it back to the Node Rule: Iin=Iout. Since I1=8 A and I2=3 A, we need IAB to be outgoing to balance. To satisfy the Node Rule, we set IAB=IoutI2=IinI2=I1I2=5 A

We do a similar analysis for node B. Incoming current is IAB, and outgoing current is I3. Since IAB=5 A and I3=4 A, we need IBD to be outgoing to balance. To satisfy the Node Rule, we set IBD=IoutI3=IinI3=IABI3=1 A

For node C, incoming current is I2 and I3. There is no outgoing current defined yet! ICD must be outgoing to balance. To satisfy the Node Rule, we set ICD=Iout=Iin=I2+I3=7 A

Lastly, we look at node D. Incoming current is IBD and ICD. Since there is no outgoing current defined yet, IDbattery must be outgoing to balance. To satisfy the Node Rule, we set IDbattery=Iout=Iin=IBD+IBD=8 A

Notice that IDbattery=I1. This will always be the case for currents going in and out of the battery (approximating a few things that are usually safe to approximate, such as a steady current). In fact, we could have treated the battery as another node in this example. Notice also that if you incorrectly reason about the direction of a current (incoming or outgoing), the calculation will give a negative number for the current. The Node Rule is self-correcting. A final diagram with directions is shown below.

Circuit with Nodes

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  • Last modified: 2017/10/06 17:08
  • by tallpaul