Calculate the equivalent capacitance of the circuit

AI Thread Summary
To calculate the equivalent capacitance of the circuit, it's essential to identify the configuration of the capacitors. Capacitors C3 and C4 are in series, while capacitor C2 is in parallel with the combined capacitance of C3 and C4. Capacitor C1 is in series with the total capacitance of C2 and C34. Understanding the orientation of the capacitors and the connections is crucial, as the physical layout of the wires does not affect their electrical function. The key to solving the problem lies in recognizing the relationships between the capacitors based on potential drop and current flow.
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Homework Statement


Calculate the equivalent capacitance of the circuit shown in the diagram above; where C1 = 5.30 microF, C2 = 8.45 microF, C3 = 5.65 microF, and C4 = 8.60 microF.

Homework Equations


parallel: Ceq = C1 + C2 + etc
series 1/Ceq = 1/C1 + 1/C2 + etc

The Attempt at a Solution



http://www.chegg.com/homework-help/questions-and-answers/calculate-equivalent-capacitance-circuit-shown-diagram-c1-430-mu-f-c2-340-mu-f-c3-255-mu-f-q878554?frbt=1

This is the picture ^^

I tried to move it around a little and i ended up seeing that C3 and C4 are in series. And the C2 is in parallel with C34. and C1 is in series with C234. is this right?
 
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arl146 said:
I tried to move it around a little and i ended up seeing that C3 and C4 are in series. And the C2 is in parallel with C34. and C1 is in series with C234. is this right?

You are absolutely correct. :smile:
 
ok so i had a little help for my answer. so i don't fully understand how C2 is parallel with C34 ?? is there some way you could try to explain it?
 
arl146 said:
ok so i had a little help for my answer. so i don't fully understand how C2 is parallel with C34 ?? is there some way you could try to explain it?

Start by making a simplified circuit of your question. It will make things clear.
 
arl146 said:
ok so i had a little help for my answer. so i don't fully understand how C2 is parallel with C34 ?? is there some way you could try to explain it?

Keep in mind that the geometrical presentation of the circuit diagram is not important, it is the connections of the components that are important. Slanted or bent "wires" do not change their essential function: to connect the components. Feel free to straighten out the alignment of components or remove the "kinks" from wires; so long as the component interconnections remain the same, the circuit remains the same.

In the given diagram you can orient capacitor C2 vertically and remove the "kink" in the C3-C4 connection and make them vertically oriented too. Does that address your query?
 
so the wire that C2 is on will be vertical .. any other way you can explain "remove the "kink" in the C3-C4 connection" ? i don't see how C4 can be oriented vertically
 
arl146 said:
so the wire that C2 is on will be vertical .. any other way you can explain "remove the "kink" in the C3-C4 connection" ? i don't see how C4 can be oriented vertically

Treat all the wires as though they were elastic and can be stretched or bent at will. Can't you just grab C4 and turn it so that it becomes vertically oriented, and straightening out the C3-C4 kink at the same time?
 
arl146 said:
so the wire that C2 is on will be vertical .. any other way you can explain "remove the "kink" in the C3-C4 connection" ? i don't see how C4 can be oriented vertically

How the wire goes or even how log the wire is doesn't matter. Wires (theoretically) are considered to be of zero resistance.

Also, to identify if the components are in series or parallel, look at the potential drop and current through then, if poential drop across two components (here C34 and C2) is same, they are in parallel. And if it isn't, they are in series.

Or in current view, if current is equal, the components are in series. And in same way If current is different, they are in parallel

This might help you ...

attachment.php?attachmentid=47900&stc=1&d=1338542196.gif
 

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