How Do You Calculate Capacitance from a Voltage Decay Curve?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around calculating capacitance from a voltage decay curve in a circuit involving a resistor and a capacitor. The original poster describes a quiz question related to this topic, where they are tasked with estimating capacitance based on a graph showing voltage decay after the power supply is disconnected.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants explore the relationship between voltage decay and capacitance, referencing equations related to RC circuits. The original poster expresses confusion about their initial approach and seeks guidance on how to interpret the graph and apply relevant formulas.

Discussion Status

Some participants have provided insights into the mathematical relationships involved, such as the mean-life of the circuit and the use of logarithmic plots to analyze the decay curve. There is an acknowledgment of the original poster's struggle with the problem, and suggestions for alternative methods of estimating capacitance are being discussed.

Contextual Notes

The original poster mentions a specific requirement to calculate the capacitance in microfarads without including units in their answer. There is also an indication of previous issues with showing working, which adds to their concern about the current question.

KingBigness
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Only just started ac currents today and this was on my first quiz, I got 8/10 for it but got this question wrong.

Homework Statement


A 100 ohm resistor is connected in series with a capacitor and a power supply, and the supply voltage is brought up to 200 mV.
The graph shows- for three different capacitors- the decay of the voltage across the capacitor after the voltage source is "shorted out" .

From the graph, estimate the capacitance in the circuit which gave the red decay curve.

Calculate your answer in MICROFARADS, but do not include the units in your answer.


Homework Equations


V=IR
t=RC
t=l/C

The Attempt at a Solution



Really had no idea what to do on this question.
V=IR --> R=V/I --> R=40/100 --> 0.4ohms
c=t/R --> c=0.0001/0.4 --> 2.5E-4 --> 25MicroFarads.

I know this is completely wrong but I got in trouble for not showing working last time.

Any help would be appreciated.
 

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\tau = RC is called the mean-life of the capacitor/resistor circuit.

R=100Ω
τ= from the graph
C = what you want to find

The vurve is:
V(t)=V_0e^{-t/\tau}

ln|V(t)| = ln|V_0| - t/\tau
... so a plot of ln|V| against time will have a slope 1/\tau

OR: the mean time is how long the capacitor would have discharged in if it was not a curve ... estimate the initial slope of the graph and draw the line.
OR: use the half-life to derive the mean-life (read the half-life off the graph)
OR: read the time the capacitor takes to decay to 2/3 maximum (off the graph) - that's about the mean life.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capacitor#DC_circuits
 
Last edited:
Awesome thanks for that. Didn't know what to search cause I didn't know what it was called but this helps a lot.
Thank you
 
Searching "capacitor" would have given you wikipedia in the top ten. "capacitor physics" would be better and "discharging capacitor" even better.

Reading wikipedia would have given you better search terms like "exponential decay".
 

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