Calculating Time Constant and Effective Resistance for a Parallel RC Circuit

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the time constant and effective resistance in a parallel RC circuit consisting of a resistor R1, a capacitor C, and a resistor R2. The original poster struggles to find resources that provide formulas for the time constant of a capacitor in parallel with a resistor, often encountering information related to AC circuits instead. It is emphasized that the reactance of a capacitor is frequency-dependent, complicating the analysis for a DC circuit. Suggestions include using Thevenin and Norton equivalents or applying Kirchhoff's laws to simplify the circuit and derive the necessary equations. The conversation highlights the need for clear resources on analyzing a two-resistor, one-capacitor circuit to determine current flow and time-dependent behavior.
galoisien
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I am trying obtain some equations for an RC circuit that has a resistor R1 after a battery, which then splits into a capacitor C and a resistor R2 (the circuit closes after this point).

When I try to seek help online, the resources are quite unhelpful. I cannot seem for example, obtain any formulas for the time constant for a capacitor connected in parallel to a resistor. When I try to look up the effective resistance of a capacitor I get resources that talk about alternating current circuits!

I know that capacitors start at zero resistance in the beginning and increase in resistance later. I cannot for the life of me however seem to plot the effective resistance (reactance) of a capacitor.

At tau/2, what is the resistance of a capacitor? How would I obtain RC constants?
 
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The reactance of a capacitor is a function of frequency. That's why you're finding all the discussions involving AC circuits. A step-function input, which is what I assume you have here as you're talking about a time constant, is comprised of an infinite combination of frequencies; there is no single number describing the reactance of a capacitor.

One thing you can do is use Thevenin and Norton equivalents to simplify the circuit to a basic RC circuit with only one resistor. If you're not familiar with these, just write down the loop equations, i.e. apply Kirchoff's laws, and solve them. It's pretty straightforward.
 
There has to be a value describing the resistance of a capacitor in a DC circuit, because if it's connected in parallel to a resistor, that resistance describes how much current is flowing through the resistor (as opposed to charging the capacitor).

I'm trying to analyse it as a current divider. The lack of any formulas is really annoying! What is the time-dependent resistance of a capacitor?

"If you're not familiar with these, just write down the loop equations, i.e. apply Kirchoff's laws, and solve them. It's pretty straightforward."

I can't figure out the time constants for this circuit... I need values as a function of time.
 
Okay every time they talk about Kirchoff's law for an RC circuit, I only see the example for a single resistor in series with a capacitor -- much too simple

OR multiple capacitors with multiple batteries and inductors and everything with a whole mess of equations -- much too complex.

where are some resources where I can get help for a two-resistor, one-capacitor, two-loop, one-battery circuit? I don't know where to start to set up a differential equation.
 
galoisien said:
There has to be a value describing the resistance of a capacitor in a DC circuit, because if it's connected in parallel to a resistor, that resistance describes how much current is flowing through the resistor (as opposed to charging the capacitor).

I'm trying to analyse it as a current divider. The lack of any formulas is really annoying! What is the time-dependent resistance of a capacitor?
The problem is, your approach won't work because there is no such thing as a "time-dependent resistance of a capacitor."

The basic relationship between the voltage v across a capacitor and the current i into the capacitor C is

i = C\frac{dv}{dt}
"If you're not familiar with these, just write down the loop equations, i.e. apply Kirchoff's laws, and solve them. It's pretty straightforward."

I can't figure out the time constants for this circuit... I need values as a function of time.
 
If I am trying to figure out how much current will pass through a capacitor given a resistor in parallel for some particular point in time.
 
I know, and I've already told you how to analyze this type of problem. If you're just going to ignore the suggestion, there's not much more I can say.
 

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