Mr.Bomzh
- 90
- 0
Hello,
My friend was reading up on transistors and basically the way i see it, a transistor is a device which (using little current/voltage , depending on the transistor) can control larger amounts of current/voltage , so all transistors are devices which work by letting current flow through them or blocking current flow.
A capacitor has no current flow though it physically (neglecting some small leaks etc) but in a circuit it acts as a device which causes current flow (charge flowing to and from the pates of a capacitor upon charging up and/or discharging)
After the current/voltage source is disconnected the capacitor still has it's charge due to the electric field, and the opposite charges attracting each other.
So here is my question , say I wanted to use the capacitor as a source for current flow , now while I charge the capacitor, charges flow to the plates , there is current in the wires ,as the capacitor has charged the current drops until reaches zero.
There is charge in the capacitor but I want now for that charge to flow back into the circuit or say to another capacitor but the field in the cap won't let me do that , is there a way to shield the electric field between the plates so that the charges won't feel each others attraction anymore and flow back into circuit?
My friend was reading up on transistors and basically the way i see it, a transistor is a device which (using little current/voltage , depending on the transistor) can control larger amounts of current/voltage , so all transistors are devices which work by letting current flow through them or blocking current flow.
A capacitor has no current flow though it physically (neglecting some small leaks etc) but in a circuit it acts as a device which causes current flow (charge flowing to and from the pates of a capacitor upon charging up and/or discharging)
After the current/voltage source is disconnected the capacitor still has it's charge due to the electric field, and the opposite charges attracting each other.
So here is my question , say I wanted to use the capacitor as a source for current flow , now while I charge the capacitor, charges flow to the plates , there is current in the wires ,as the capacitor has charged the current drops until reaches zero.
There is charge in the capacitor but I want now for that charge to flow back into the circuit or say to another capacitor but the field in the cap won't let me do that , is there a way to shield the electric field between the plates so that the charges won't feel each others attraction anymore and flow back into circuit?