Charging a capacitor with AC voltage

AI Thread Summary
Charging a capacitor with AC voltage involves the capacitor alternately charging and discharging due to the changing direction of current. While the capacitor cannot retain a steady charge in an AC circuit, it does accumulate charge during positive cycles of the waveform, reaching maximum charge at specific intervals. The frequency of the AC source dictates how quickly this process occurs, with the capacitor effectively charging and discharging multiple times per second. In applications like a Tesla coil, the capacitor is used to store energy briefly, releasing it rapidly into the primary coil, which is essential for generating high-voltage sparks. Understanding this rapid cycle clarifies the role of capacitors in AC circuits and their function in energy transfer.
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Homework Statement


Can somebody explain how it is possible to charge a capacitor using ac voltage? The way I see it is the capacitor wouldn't have time to charge as the voltage is constantly switching. In the case of 60Hz - 120 times a second.

I seen a schematic of a tesla coil where the capacitor is in series with a primary coil the source is a transformer. A spark gap is in parallel with the source and capacitor/transformer. There were no diodes.

Homework Equations


The Attempt at a Solution

 
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Capacitor stores charge and not current. In genereral,you must convert AC into DC using rectifier diode and then charge the capacitor.

But, if u connect a capacitor with AC source,then it will alternately get charged and discharged determined by frequency of the source. This is obviously because the current isn't in one direction. So it can't be charged i.e charge can't be retained/stored in capacitor in AC curcit
 
just consider for example the AC voltage where the the voltage is given by V(t) = Vsin(t), for the duration of the positive part of the wave from 0 to pi/2 the capacitor would be 'charging' for that whole process and be at maximum charge at pi/2.

then from pi/2 to pi, the voltage will be decreasing across the capacitor and so the charge will be decreasing. this will be the same process for the other bit of the wave except it will be charged the other way round eg the plate that was originally positive will be negative from pi to 2pi .

So the capacitor is still charging just for very short intervals depending on the frequency
 
Yep. I get the picture now. I just didn't appreciate the speed at which this is happening. Basically the spark gap must be firing twice per cycle. I wonder why the cap is there in the first place? Is it because of w=.5cv^2? A quick release of energy into the coil.
 
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