Calculating Total Charge in an Ideal Circuit Element | Circuit Analysis Homework

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the total charge entering an ideal circuit element given a specific current function. The current is defined as zero for t < 0 and follows an exponential decay for t ≥ 0. To find the total charge, integration of the current function over time is necessary, specifically from 0 to infinity. A participant initially miscalculated the integration but corrected it by recognizing the importance of the negative exponent in the exponential function. The correct total charge is confirmed to be 4000 microcoulombs.
kaiser0792
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Homework Statement


The current at the terminals of the element in an ideal basic circuit element is
i = 0, t < 0;

i = 20e(-5000t) A, t \leq 0

Calculate the total charge ( in microcoulombs) entering the element at its upper terminal.


Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution

I'm just starting a Circuit Analysis course next week and I'm looking ahead in the text, trying to hit the ground running. There are no sample problems that even give me a starting place??





 
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Current can be expressed at the rate of flow of charge, so that i =dQ/dt.

So you can integrate over time and get the total charge. Though why it time t < 0?
 
I suppose that is just a way of saying that there was no current flowing before the reference time, t = 0.
 
I tried integrating and came up with -0.04e-5000t + C coulombs.

Answer is supposed to be 4000 microcoulombs. My integration is a little rusty. Help?
 
kaiser0792 said:
I tried integrating and came up with -0.04e-5000t + C coulombs.

Answer is supposed to be 4000 microcoulombs. My integration is a little rusty. Help?

The -0.04 should be 0.004, but remember your time is t≥0. So you are really integrating from 0 to ∞ so you need to compute

\left[ -0.004e^{-5000t} \right]_0 ^{\infty}
 
Thanks for the help, I knew the Integral to be solved and the limits of integration, what I was missing was the negative exponent of e. You helped me, thank you.
 
rock.freak667 said:
The -0.04 should be 0.004, but remember your time is t≥0. So you are really integrating from 0 to ∞ so you need to compute

\left[ -0.004e^{-5000t} \right]_0 ^{\infty}

Thanks rock.freak, I was overlooking the negative exponent of "e" when I was integrating.
You helped me, thanks. Sometimes you just need to bounce it off someone else.
 

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