Charge on capacitors each with a battery

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on solving a circuit problem involving three capacitors (C1, C2, C3) connected to batteries with specified voltages. Participants emphasize the importance of applying Kirchhoff's circuit law to analyze current distribution and determine the equivalent capacitance for calculations. A key insight is that the total voltage across the series-connected batteries is 28 V, which is crucial for finding the charge on the capacitors using the formula V = Q/Ceq. The conversation highlights the necessity of recognizing that the sum of charges on connected capacitor plates must equal zero, which helps establish a third equation for solving the problem. This understanding ultimately aids in determining the charges on each capacitor accurately.
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Homework Statement


Three capacitors C1–C3, all initially uncharged, are placed in the circuit shown. The capacitances are C1=8.9 μF, C2=20 μF, C3=12.2 μF, and the battery voltages are V1=18 V, V2=10 V, V3=18 V.

What is the magnitude q1 of the charge on capacitor C1 once equilibrium has been established? Answer (given but I can't get it on my own): 0.000121 C

What is the magnitude q2 of the charge on capacitor C2 once equilibrium has been established? Answer (given but I can't get it on my own): 0.000287 C

What is the magnitude q3 of the charge on capacitor C3 once equilibrium has been established? Answer (given but I can't get it on my own): 0.000166 C

Homework Equations



Potential across each pair of battery / capacitor is the same.

The Attempt at a Solution



Equate the potential gain / drop from each branch to one another. But only get two equations (third is redundant) and have three unknowns.

Thanks in advance for any help.
 
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Use conservation of charge.

ehild
 
Hey,

What I did to work through this problem was to first determine which way the currents were going from the sources and then write an equation based on Kirchhoff's circuit law for the current distribution. From there you can rewrite the capacitors in their appropriate forms (series or parallel equivalents) and start solving for variables.

The one thing that had me caught up for quite some time was what the total voltage was... pay close attention to the circuit diagram.

Cheers
 
ehild said:
Use conservation of charge.

ehild

Thanks for this message ehild, can you give me a bit more detail on the steps I would need to do in order to get the final solution?

Thanks again
 
Rtjones said:
Hey,

What I did to work through this problem was to first determine which way the currents were going from the sources and then write an equation based on Kirchhoff's circuit law for the current distribution. From there you can rewrite the capacitors in their appropriate forms (series or parallel equivalents) and start solving for variables.

The one thing that had me caught up for quite some time was what the total voltage was... pay close attention to the circuit diagram.

Cheers

Thanks RTjones. I have tried this but am still not getting the answer. Did you get the final answers?

Thanks again for any further help you can provide.
 
Yes I did get the correct answers. What I ended up doing to get the correct answer was using the EQn V = Q/Ceq. Where Ceq is the correct form for capacitance and Q is the total charge (which is subsequently the charge on capacitor 2). The part that was tripping me up though was that V is 28, not 18 or 10...the reason being because V1 and V2 are in series.

Using this V with the equation above you can solve for Qtotal (aka Q2) and then work your way back to the other charges via relating different paths to one another. Let me know if you're still struggling, I'd be glad to help...
 
reset_7 said:
Thanks for this message ehild, can you give me a bit more detail on the steps I would need to do in order to get the final solution?

Thanks again

You can change the position of the third battery with capacitor 3, it will not alter the voltages. If the upper plates of all capacitors are connected, no charge can flow on them, so the sum of charges on the three plates is zero. On the plates, the individual charges can be either positive or negative. If the capacitors are charged to Q1, Q2, Q3, respectively, there is -Q1 charge on the right plate of C1, +Q2 on the upper plate of C2 and -Q3 on the upper plate of C3. See picture.

ehild
 
Last edited:
Rtjones said:
Yes I did get the correct answers. What I ended up doing to get the correct answer was using the EQn V = Q/Ceq. Where Ceq is the correct form for capacitance and Q is the total charge (which is subsequently the charge on capacitor 2). The part that was tripping me up though was that V is 28, not 18 or 10...the reason being because V1 and V2 are in series.

Using this V with the equation above you can solve for Qtotal (aka Q2) and then work your way back to the other charges via relating different paths to one another. Let me know if you're still struggling, I'd be glad to help...

Ok, thanks again for your help.
 
ehild said:
You can change the position of the third battery with capacitor 3, it will not alter the voltages. If the upper plates of all capacitors are connected, no charge can flow on them, so the sum of charges on the three plates is zero. On the plates, the individual charges can be either positive or negative. If the capacitors are charged to Q1, Q2, Q3, respectively, there is -Q1 charge on the right plate of C1, +Q2 on the upper plate of C2 and -Q3 on the upper plate of C3. See picture.

ehild

Thanks, it was that fact that the charges must add up to zero due to plates being connecged that gave me my third equation.
 

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