Sketching charging and discharging of the capacitor

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A blinking light circuit can be built using a neon lamp and a 4.0 μF capacitor in parallel, where the lamp remains inactive until the capacitor voltage reaches 75 V, at which point it discharges rapidly, emitting a flash of light. The discussion includes determining the flash frequency based on resistance values and sketching the voltage across the capacitor over time, highlighting both charging and discharging phases. The charging phase follows the formula VC=VO(1-e-t/RC), while the discharging phase uses VC=VOe-t/RC, with the graph expected to show curved lines rather than straight ones. Participants emphasize the need for the sketch to illustrate the asymptotic nature of the charging curve and the steeper discharge phase. Overall, the circuit demonstrates a practical application of capacitor charging and discharging principles.
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A simple type of blinking light circuit can be constructed using a neon lamp. The circuit shown here has a 4.0 μF capacitor in parallel with a neon lamp. When the voltage is low in the RC portion of the circuit, the lamp does not conduct electricity. Therefore, it is effectively not there from an electrical point of view. The RC circuit will then charge from the 110 V power supply. However, when the voltage across the capacitor reaches 75 V, the neon will ionize very quickly and the neon lamp will become a very good conductor, and will immediately discharge the capacitor. The energy stored in the capacitor will be given off as a flash of orange light, making this a useful circuit. After the flash, the charging process will start once more since the voltage will again be low.

a. Determine the flash frequency with the resistance value shown.
b. Make a sketch of the voltage across the capacitor versus time in such a
circuit, showing several periods.

I used the formula:

VC=VO(1-e-t/RC)

and solved for t and frequency.

I'm more concern with the sketch. Correct me if I'm wrong.
So far, I have the t of the charging process. That means I have to solve the t of the discharging process using the formula:

VC=VOe-t/RC

so then my graph can look like: / (charging) \ (discharging) / (charging) \ (discharging) ?
 
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Sketch a graph of e-t then 1-e-t

Hint: The charge part of the curve is not a straight line.
 
Thanks for your reply!

So just an idea of putting it together, is it something like this?
physics7.jpg


(Rough sketch) I know it should be curved lines lol
 
Yes but you only need show one cycle. I would also label the part of the waveform that obeys..

VC=VO(1-e-t/RC)

Perhaps add a dotted line to show the charge phase is asymptotic to the supply voltage.

Perhaps show the discharge phase to be more obviously steeper than the charge phase.
 
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