Charging capacitor by another capacitor

AI Thread Summary
When a charged capacitor discharges into an empty capacitor, the process concludes when both capacitors reach the same potential difference. The energy calculations reveal a discrepancy between initial and final states, leading to discussions on energy loss mechanisms. Some sources attribute this energy loss to heat dissipation in the connecting wires, while others suggest it transforms into electromagnetic waves. The dominant form of energy loss depends on the system's resistance and inductance. Ultimately, energy loss during this process can be quantified as heat generated in the resistive components of the circuit.
bgq
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Hi,

Consider a charged capacitor connected to a an empty capacitor. The charged capacitor starts to discharge while the empty capacitor starts charging. The whole process finishes when the two capacitors maintain the same potential difference. The problem is that when calculating the energies at the beginning and at the end, we find that they are different. Some books says that the lost energy is dissipated in the connecting wires, yet others say that the energy is transformed into electromagnetic waves.

How can we interpret the loss of the electric energy in this case?
 
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Both types of energy transfer will take place, but which one dominates will depend on the details of the system such as the resistance and inductance of the wires used to join the capacitors.
 
hi bgq! :smile:

the energy loss equals I2R, so it's certainly the loss through the resistor

from the pf library on capacitor


Inverse exponential rate of charging:

A capacitor does not charge or discharge instantly.

When a steady voltage V_1 is first applied, through a circuit of resistance R, to a capacitor across which there is already a voltage V_0, both the charging current I in the circuit and the voltage difference V_1\,-\,V change exponentially, with a parameter -1/CR:

I(t) = \frac{V_1\,-\,V_0}{R}\,e^{-\frac{1}{CR}\,t}

V_1\ -\ V(t) = (V_1\,-\,V_0)\,e^{-\frac{1}{CR}\,t}

So the current becomes effectively zero, and the voltage across the capacitor becomes effectively V_1, after a time proportional to CR.

Energy loss:

Energy lost (to heat in the resistor):

\int\,I^2(t)\,R\,dt\ =\ \frac{1}{2}\,C (V_1\,-\,V_0)^2
 
Thank you very much
 
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