Capacitor in AC circuit plus DC offset

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around analyzing a circuit with a 5V AC source and a 15V DC source, focusing on the behavior of a capacitor within this setup. Participants explore how the capacitor interacts with changing voltages and currents, particularly at point A, where the potential is influenced by both the capacitor's charge and the current through a resistor. The key point is that the capacitor responds to changes in potential rather than current, acting to stabilize the voltage at point A. The conversation highlights the interdependence of voltage and current in the circuit, suggesting that changes occur simultaneously rather than sequentially. Understanding this relationship is crucial for analyzing the circuit's behavior accurately.
nik2011
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Hello guys!
This is not quite a homework, but anyway.

Homework Statement



I'm trying to figure out some details about the circuit below.

attachment.php?attachmentid=39720&stc=1&d=1318012834.png


The circuit contains two voltage sources. V1 is 5V 100Hz AC source, V2 is 15V DC source.

I know I can analyze this circuit simply treating it as if there are two currents. One is direct current, the other one is alternating current. But this is only a convenient way to analyze a circuit.
And I'm trying to imagine what's happening on a bit "lower" level.

The Attempt at a Solution



So when AC source's voltage is increasing the current is increasing too and so more electrons are flowing through the wire. And bigger part of these electrons flow through the capacitor.

When AC source is decreasing the current though the V1 and V2 doesn't change its direction but only decreases its value because the effective voltage across the circuit decreases but still is positive (E. g. 15V - 5V = 10V). But the current through the circuit branch with the capacitor changes its direction to the opposite.

What I don't understand is how the voltage drop between the point A and the ground is formed.

1. Is it like this: V1 voltage decreases -> the current decreases -> the capacitor "sees" that the current decreased and starts to discharge?
If so, how exactly can the capacitor "see" that the current changed?

2. Or it is like the following: V1 voltage decreases -> the current decreases -> the voltage drop across R2 decreases -> because the voltage drop decreased the capacitor starts to discharge?
But in this case, the voltage drop across R2 is the same as the voltage drop between the point A and the ground. And the voltage drop between A and the ground depends on the currents through R2 and the capacitor, and the current through the capacitor depends on the voltage drop between A and the ground...

If the question is not clear enough I would be glad to clarify.

Thank you!
 

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Take a look at what happens at point A if the capacitor is not there. The potential across the resistor stack will vary with time, and point A will be a certain fraction of that total voltage.

Now when the capacitor is slapped on it acts like a sort of "voltage boat anchor" that tries to keep point A from changing potential too quickly. Current runs in and out of the capacitor as it tries to keep up with the ever changing "steady state" for the given circuit condition at any given instant. The rate at which current can flow in and out of the capacitor is determined by what the resistors will allow (hence the circuit has a time constant).

When point A is being driven to a potential that is below what the capacitor currently holds, current must flow out of the capacitor, desiring to match that potential. Similarly, when point A is being driven towards a potential that is higher than that currently on the capacitor, current will flow into the capacitor to drive its potential higher.

The capacitor's charging or discharging depends upon the potential it currently has on it and the potential that is trying to be established across it by the surrounding circuit. It doesn't "see" current, it "sees" potential.
 
Hi gneill,
Thank you for the answer.

gneill said:
When point A is being driven to a potential that is below what the capacitor currently holds, current must flow out of the capacitor, desiring to match that potential.

It doesn't "see" current, it "sees" potential.

As I understand point A's potential is
Ua = Ir2 * R2 + Ic * Xc
and
Ic = Ua / Xc

Where
Ua - point A's potentiatel
Ir2 - curren through R2
R2 - R2 resistance in Ohms
Ic - current through the capacitor
Xc - the capacitor's impedance

So to put this in words, potential of point A depends on current through the capacitor but current through the capacitor depends on point A's potential. And I can't understand what comes first here.

E. g. if V1's voltage is changing then as a result Ua is changing but how the circuit knows the new value of Ua if it needs Ic to determine Ua. And to determine Ic the circuit needs Ua... And so on in circles :)
 
nik2011 said:
Hi gneill,
Thank you for the answer.



As I understand point A's potential is
Ua = Ir2 * R2 + Ic * Xc
and
Ic = Ua / Xc

Where
Ua - point A's potentiatel
Ir2 - curren through R2
R2 - R2 resistance in Ohms
Ic - current through the capacitor
Xc - the capacitor's impedance

So to put this in words, potential of point A depends on current through the capacitor but current through the capacitor depends on point A's potential. And I can't understand what comes first here.

E. g. if V1's voltage is changing then as a result Ua is changing but how the circuit knows the new value of Ua if it needs Ic to determine Ua. And to determine Ic the circuit needs Ua... And so on in circles :)

Well, that's the essential property of a physical system with mutually dependent and interacting quantities and qualities. It's also why we need differential equations to describe them!
 
Thank you, gneill.
 
gneill said:
Well, that's the essential property of a physical system with mutually dependent and interacting quantities and qualities. It's also why we need differential equations to describe them!

Would it be correct to think that when V1's voltage changes then as a result Ua and Ic change to appropriate values at the same time so neither of them comes first/second?
 
nik2011 said:
Would it be correct to think that when V1's voltage changes then as a result Ua and Ic change to appropriate values at the same time so neither of them comes first/second?

Yes, that would be the macroscopic view of what happens.

On the microscopic scale you would eventually be dealing with quantum effects, individual particles and averages of assemblies of particles (electrons), Bell curves and their outliers, and so on. The "which came first" argument becomes rather grey in that arena, but fortunately we're not dealing with things on that scale here! :smile:
 
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