Heat dissipated in a Resistor-Capacitor circuit

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating heat dissipation in a resistor-capacitor circuit involving two capacitors, C1 and C2. The initial charge on C1 is 48 μC, and after a time interval, it drops to 36 μC while C2 gains charge, leading to confusion about the potential across C2. Participants clarify that charge conservation principles apply, and the energy difference between the capacitors should equal the heat dissipated. The original poster initially miscalculated the energy difference but later corrected it, confirming the answer aligns with the provided solution. The conversation emphasizes the importance of accurate calculations and understanding energy conservation in capacitor circuits.
Prabs3257
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Homework Statement
A charged capacitor c1= 12uF with voltage 4 volt is connected to uncharged capacitor c2=4uF and a resistance of 4 ohm as shown in the diagram . total heat generated across resistance is H upto a time interval t0 if at t=t0 voltage across C1 is 3V then value of H/4 is
Relevant Equations
Energy conservation
I tried to conserve the charge on the left plates of both the capacitors as intially the total charge on both is 48 and at t=t0 the total charge is 36(on c1) +4V(V is the potential across c2) so i got V=3 and then i conserved the energy
Initial energy on both capacitor = final energy on both + heat due to resistor but then i got H = 26 but as per the answer given H should be 24 please tell me where am i wrong
 

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Prabs3257 said:
Homework Statement:: A charged capacitor c1= 12uF with voltage 4 volt is connected to uncharged capacitor c2=4uF and a resistance of 4 ohm as shown in the diagram . total heat generated across resistance is H upto a time interval t0 if at t=t0 voltage across C1 is 3V then value of H/4 is
Relevant Equations:: Energy conservation

I tried to conserve the charge on the left plates of both the capacitors as intially the total charge on both is 48 and at t=t0 the total charge is 36(on c1) +4V(V is the potential across c2) so i got V=3 and then i conserved the energy
How do you arrive at the potential across ##C_2## is 4 Volts? ##C_1## started out at 4 V and dropped to 3 V. How did ##C_1## manage to drive current "uphill"?
 
Hmmm ... ##t_0## is an arbitrary point in time, not some equilibrium point at infinite time that you might know something about. This looks like a differential equation to me. Is this the kind of class where you might be expected to solve a differential equation?
 
I think if it is a class where you are given the formula for RC capacitor discharge with a time constant (we did this in High School Physics) then you don't need to know differential equations to find an expression for voltage across the resistor at a particular time. But it might be a little more complicated. hmmm. I am on my phone at the moment. Let me think about it.
 
OK, I don't think you need any differential equations, or even the time domain expression of voltage. Take a look at this http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/electric/capeng.html

Note that charge is conserved, and the resistor does not store any charge. All charge that leaves the first capacitor, goes to the 2nd capacitor. You can use the online interactive calculator (or the formulas) and find the amount of charge and amount of energy in the first capacitor, initially. Then plug in the new voltage and find the amount of charge and energy left when it is 3 volts. Then you can use the formulas, to find out how much energy the 2nd capacitor has, based on its charge and capacitance. You can also calculate its voltage.

So you have energy left the first capacitor, and the second capacitor has some energy on it. The difference must be what was dissipated as heat.
 
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scottdave said:
OK, I don't think you need any differential equations, or even the time domain expression of voltage. Take a look at this http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/electric/capeng.html

Note that charge is conserved, and the resistor does not store any charge. All charge that leaves the first capacitor, goes to the 2nd capacitor. You can use the online interactive calculator (or the formulas) and find the amount of charge and amount of energy in the first capacitor, initially. Then plug in the new voltage and find the amount of charge and energy left when it is 3 volts. Then you can use the formulas, to find out how much energy the 2nd capacitor has, based on its charge and capacitance. You can also calculate its voltage.

So you have energy left the first capacitor, and the second capacitor has some energy on it. The difference must be what was dissipated as heat.
Ya what i did was something along the same line i conserved thw charge between the 2 capacitor plates as intially there was total of 48 uC charge so at t0 we were given the charge on c1(q=cv where v was given to us as 3) so at t0 it became 36 + charge on c2 at t0 equating initial and final i got the potential of c2 at t0 hence the initial and final energy
 
Prabs3257 said:
Ya what i did was something along the same line i conserved thw charge between the 2 capacitor plates as intially there was total of 48 uC charge so at t0 we were given the charge on c1(q=cv where v was given to us as 3) so at t0 it became 36 + charge on c2 at t0 equating initial and final i got the potential of c2 at t0 hence the initial and final energy
But the ans i am getting is not correct as per the answer key
 
gneill said:
How do you arrive at the potential across ##C_2## is 4 Volts? ##C_1## started out at 4 V and dropped to 3 V. How did ##C_1## manage to drive current "uphill"?
gneill said:
How do you arrive at the potential across ##C_2## is 4 Volts? ##C_1## started out at 4 V and dropped to 3 V. How did ##C_1## manage to drive current "uphill"?
potential across c2 is not 4 the 4V i wrote represented the charge (capcitance(4) * potential(V)) you must have thought the V is the si unit of potential but actually V Is the potential of c2 at t0 sorry about the formating
 
When I did all of those calculations, I got 24 μJ energy difference between C1 and C2 energies.

Can you show your calculations, and we can help you figure out what happened?
 
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ohh no really sorry i did the calculations again and got the correct answer just did a multiplication error earlier :sorry: i thought i was conceptually wrong really sorry for all the trouble to everyone and thanks a lot for your help
 
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