Capacitors in Series: Understand Potential Difference

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Capacitors in series have different potential differences due to variations in their capacitance, which affects the voltage drop across each capacitor. While the charge on each capacitor remains the same, the voltage across them can differ based on their individual capacitance values. If capacitors are identical, the voltage drop will be equal; however, when they differ, the total voltage across the series must still equal the supply voltage. This concept is similar to resistors in series, where the voltage drop is not necessarily equal unless the resistances are the same. Understanding these principles clarifies why textbooks may imply varying potential differences across capacitors in series.
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Hello,

I've read about capacitors in series from two different textbooks, and both of them seem to implicitly state that the electric potential is different for each capacitor in series. Why is this so?
 
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Well it may differ but not in a large amount , certainly you won't see that with your average low budget multimeter.
Have you heard about capacitor ESR? They usually try to match as close as possible capacitor in the power supplies of hi end pre amplifiers and other places which demand precision and quality.

The potential difference comes from the fact that the capacitors themselves tend to differ.Just like transistors , you can get two of the same model but measure them precisely and they won't be exactly the same that's why they match transistors in pairs for hi end amplifiers and other products.
It has a lot to do with the quality and manufacturing process.ofcourse in theory two similar caps should act the same way but in reality they usually don't.
Electrolytic capacitors have the foil and dielectric soaked in electrolyte hence the name.When time goes one capacitor can be more hermetically sealed than the other and so evaporate faster and loose it's capacitance , there are other factors that contribute to the electric potential upon a capacitor.
 
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Bashyboy said:
I've read about capacitors in series from two different textbooks, and both of them seem to implicitly state that the electric potential is different for each capacitor in series. Why is this so?
Why would you think them to be the same? (Unless their capacitance were equal.) What will be the same though?

Similar idea for resistors in series. The voltage across each will not necessarily be equal.
 
C = q/V right...

So with two 'C's in series, whatever current [charge [q]] that accumulates on
one accumulates on the other...THAT'S ALL THAT IS, IN GENERAL EQUAL.

When they are in PARALLEL is when the voltages across capacitors is the same...if they
are different 'C', then they accumulate different q.
 
Well, I am pretty certain that each capacitor in series has to have the same charge. So, the consensus is that, in theory, the voltage is the same across each capacitor in series, and that I gathered an incorrect impression from the two textbooks?
 
Bashyboy said:
Well, I am pretty certain that each capacitor in series has to have the same charge.
Correct.
So, the consensus is that, in theory, the voltage is the same across each capacitor in series,
No. (Crazymechanic's response was off the mark.)
and that I gathered an incorrect impression from the two textbooks?
No. No reason for capacitors in series to have the same voltage unless they happen to have the same capacitance.
 
I am pretty certain that each capacitor in series has to have the same charge.

of course that is correct...where would electrons go other than along the conductor...from one circuit element to the next in series...they cannot appear and disappear willy-nilly...from that insight, and knowing q = CV you should be to derive and see for yourself what DocAl and I have been saying...
 
So if I put two different capacitors in series, they will accumulate the same charge?
 
greswd said:
So if I put two different capacitors in series, they will accumulate the same charge?
Sure.
 
  • #10
Well, Doc Al, my initial glance of your first reply left me quite confused by your seemingly rhetorical question. Obviously I am missing out on some conception, as to why the voltage isn't the same across capacitors that are in series. If someone could perhaps explain this, I'd be eternally grateful
 
  • #11
greswd said:
So if I put two different capacitors in series, they will accumulate the same charge?

They have to, because any charge on one plate of one capacitor must be taken from the other plate of the other capacitor.
 
  • #12
Bashyboy said:
Well, Doc Al, my initial glance of your first reply left me quite confused by your seemingly rhetorical question.
I thought you answered my 'rhetorical' question. What must be the same for each capacitor in series? Answer: The charge!

Once you understand that, you can then deduce that the voltage across each capacitor in series must be V = Q/C. Thus the voltage depends on the capacitance.
Obviously I am missing out on some conception, as to why the voltage isn't the same across capacitors that are in series.
Again, what leads you to think that capacitors in series would have the same voltage?
 
  • #13
Bashyboy said:
Well, Doc Al, my initial glance of your first reply left me quite confused by your seemingly rhetorical question. Obviously I am missing out on some conception, as to why the voltage isn't the same across capacitors that are in series. If someone could perhaps explain this, I'd be eternally grateful

A capacitor is basically two metal plates with a gap between them. So let's consider a simple circuit:

Let point A = the negative end of a battery. This point is connected by a wire to point B = the negative plate of the first capacitor. Nearby is point C = the positive plate of the first capacitor. This is connected by wire to point D = the negative plate of the second capacitor. Nearby is point E = the positive plate of the second capacitor. Finally, this is connected by wire to point F = the positive end of the battery.

Before the circuit was closed, the capacitors had no charge, and no current through them. When you close the circuit, current starts flowing. Specifically, electrons start flowing out of the battery at point A. These electrons build up at point B, causing negative charge to build up. This repels electrons in the plate at point C, making it positively charged. The electrons that leave C travel to point D, causing it to become negatively charged. This repels electrons in plate E, causing it to be positively charged. Then finally, the electrons that leave point E travel into the battery, completing the circuit.

The general rule of thumb is that each capacitor remains electrically neutral at all times. That means that:

  1. Q_B + Q_C = the charge on the first capacitor = 0.
  2. Q_D + Q_E = the charge on the second capacitor = 0.

In addition, since charge can't flow anywhere except between points connected by wire, then

  1. Q_C + Q_D = the charge on the isolated set of points C and D =0.

Together, these imply that Q_B = Q_D.
 
  • #14
Well, I suppose mathematically I can see that the electric potential can be difference for each capacitor in a series; I am just trying to figure out a more intuitive way of what's going on, and I just can't figure it out.
 
  • #15
The rules for circuits are the following:

  1. At each point in the circuit, there is a current.
  2. At each juncture, the total current into that juncture must be zero.
  3. At each capacitor, there is a charge.
  4. The current flowing into the capacitor is given by I = \dfrac{dQ}{dt}
  5. At each point in the circuit, there is a voltage.
  6. Points connected by wires have the same voltage (neglecting the resistance in the wire).
  7. Points connected by a battery have a voltage difference equal to the battery's voltage.
  8. The voltage change across a capacitor is equal to QC where Q is the charge on the capacitor, and C is the capacitance.
  9. The voltage change across a resistor is equal to IR where R is the resistance and I is the current in the wire.
  10. The voltage change across an inductor is equal to L \dfrac{dI}{dt}
 
  • #16
Bashyboy said:
Well, I suppose mathematically I can see that the electric potential can be difference for each capacitor in a series; I am just trying to figure out a more intuitive way of what's going on, and I just can't figure it out.

I'm not sure exactly what the stumbling block is: the voltage drop across a capacitor is given by V = QC. For capacitors in series, the Qs are the same, but the Cs are different, so the Vs are different.
 
  • #17
So, if the capacitance of each capacitor was the same, then electric potential would be the same at each capacitor?
 
  • #18
Bashyboy said:
So, if the capacitance of each capacitor was the same, then electric potential would be the same at each capacitor?
Sure.
 
  • #19
Oh, okay, I see. The impression that I was getting from my textbooks was that the electric potential HAD to drop because of the series configuration. But now I know that isn't true. Thank you, everyone.
 
  • #20
Bashyboy said:
The impression that I was getting from my textbooks was that the electric potential HAD to drop because of the series configuration.
What do you mean?

The potential difference across each capacitor is what we are talking about. (Or so I thought.)
 
  • #21
Just to be clear, here's an example:

Imagine three identical capacitors hooked up in series. The entire string is attached to a 9 volt battery. Once they are fully charged, each capacitor will have a potential difference of 3 volts.

If the three capacitors were not the same, then the voltage across each would not be equal. But the total voltage across all three must still add up to 9 V.

Make sense?
 
  • #22
Bashyboy said:
So, if the capacitance of each capacitor was the same, then electric potential would be the same at each capacitor?

This is the problematic word. We may all be talking at cross purposes here (not an uncommon situation and easily rectified by using diagrams and labels). For two identical capacitors, in series, the PD across each capacitor will be the same or the Potential (reference Earth) on the positive terminal of the 'upper' capacitor will be twice the Potential on the positive terminal of the 'lower' capacitor.
 
  • #23
Bashyboy said:
So, if the capacitance of each capacitor was the same, then electric potential would be the same at each capacitor?

Yes, if the capacitors in series had the same capacitance, then the voltage drop across each capacitor would be identical. (I'm using "voltage drop" rather than "electric potential", because voltage is the terminology that's usually used in circuits. But it's the same thing as electric potential.)
 
  • #24
Bashyboy said:
Oh, okay, I see. The impression that I was getting from my textbooks was that the electric potential HAD to drop because of the series configuration. But now I know that isn't true. Thank you, everyone.

This might be a confusion of terminology. Let's make this explicit:
circuit.jpg


In this picture, we have a 9 volt battery connected in series with two capacitors. The voltage drop--that is, the change in voltage--across the first capacitor is Q C_1. The voltage drop across the second capacitor is Q C_2. If the capacitors are identical, then these two voltage drops are equal. But that doesn't mean that the voltages are equal. The voltage at the positive plate of the first capacitor is V_2. The voltage on the negative plate of the first capacitor is V_3. The voltage on the positive plate of the second capacitor is V_3. The voltage on the negative plate of the second capacitor is V_1. If C_1 = C_2, then we would have:

V_3 - V_2 = V_1 - V_3

The voltage drops would be the same.
 
  • #25
I apologize for my off the mark post yesterday I was kinda sleepy and I somehow thought that your talking about capacitors in parallel.

Well anyways ofcourse you don't get the same voltage on the first plate of the second capacitor.This circuit you draw is a voltage divider.A capacitor one.
They have the same ones with resistors too.
This kinda circut was used in the older smps power supplies in the primary mains circuit to switch from 220v to 110v

In theory the voltage drop across each capacitor assuming the capacitance is the same should be equal.Well the voltage you get is depending on where you measure with respect to the ground.
Or do you want to know why is the voltage divided in capacitors in series?
 
  • #26
If they both start off uncharged and have the same C, when they have the same current passed for the same time, they will have the same pd each.
 
  • #27
All right, I understand, now. Thank you every one.
 
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