What Is the Equivalent Capacitance of an Infinite Ladder of Capacitors?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around determining the equivalent capacitance of an infinite ladder of capacitors, where each capacitor has the same capacitance value, C. The problem involves understanding the arrangement and relationships between the capacitors in the network.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants explore the implications of removing capacitors from the arrangement and how that affects the equivalent capacitance. There is discussion about the series and parallel relationships of the capacitors and attempts to set up equations based on these configurations.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with participants sharing their interpretations and equations. Some guidance has been offered regarding the relationships between capacitors in series and parallel, but there is no explicit consensus on the approach to solving the problem.

Contextual Notes

Participants express uncertainty about circuit concepts and the implications of the infinite nature of the ladder structure. There are indications of confusion regarding the arrangement of capacitors and their combinations.

cgjones
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Arrangment as is follows a's are there as place holders to keep the diagram intact while posting, all capacitors have = capacitance C

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The question just asks for the equvilant capacitance.

The professor hinted at the solution by writing 1/ceq = 1/c + 1/ceq where ceq is the equivalent capacitance and the answeris given as (c/2)((5)^(1/2)-1)
 
Last edited:
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Suppose you remove the two leftmost capacitors from the diagram.
What you have left is the same infinite network of capacitors, which should
have the same capacitance.
 
ok I understand that, so that would leave you with 1/ceq=(2/c + 1/ceq)? because the 2 "removed" capacitors are in series
 
Last edited:
cgjones said:
ok I understand that, so that would leave you with 1/ceq=(2/c + 1/ceq)? because the 2 "removed" capacitors are in series

They are not in series. draw a diagram with just the first 2 capacitors and the rest of the network as Ceq
 
so 1/ceq=1/c + 1/ceq is what i got, which is insolvable, circuts are definatly not my strong point i guess
____||_________
aaaaaaaa|aaaaa|
aaaaaaaa=aaaaa= ceq
aaaaaaaa|aaaaa|
______________|
 
cgjones said:
so 1/ceq=1/c + 1/ceq is what i got, which is insolvable, circuts are definatly not my strong point i guess
____||_________
aaaaaaaa|aaaaa|
aaaaaaaa=aaaaa= ceq
aaaaaaaa|aaaaa|
______________|

The capacity of the entire circuit Ceq is equal to the capacity of the circuit you've drawn
here, which is one capacitor of value Ceq in parallel with a capacitor of value C, and the
equivalent capacitor to that in series with another capacitor with capacitance C
 
Just do like willem2 said, and remember: capacitors in series combine like resistors in parallel, and vice versa. I tried out the problem myself, and the answer you have quoted is correct: i.e., Ceq = (c/2)(5^0.5 - 1).
 

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