What is the Initial Charging Current and Charge Stored on a Capacitor?

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AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the initial charging current and charge stored in a 50 µF capacitor connected to a 6V battery through a 100kΩ resistor. The initial charging current is correctly calculated as 60 µA, while the potential difference (pd) across both the resistor and capacitor is determined to be 3V each when the current is 30 µA. There is confusion regarding the charge stored on the capacitor; the user initially calculates it as 1.5 x 10^-4 C but is unable to reconcile this with the book's answer of 6 µC. Participants clarify that the exponential term in the charge equation cannot yield a negative value, emphasizing the importance of proper calculations. The conversation highlights the nuances of RC circuits and the relationships between current, voltage, and charge.
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Homework Statement



A 50 \muF capacitor is being charged from a 6V battery via a 100k\Omega resistor . what is the initial charging current? after a period of time, the charging current is 30\muA. what are the pd's across the resistor and the capacitor at that moment? how much charge has been stored on the capacitor up to that time?

Homework Equations



Q = CV

Initial Charging Current = emf/resistance

Q = EC (1 - e-t/RC)

The Attempt at a Solution



the initial charging current wasnt a problem, using V=IR.
I0 = 60\muA

from there on, i struggled to get the pd's but i realized that one half time had gone seeing as the current had halved so the pd must be 3V on each.

i tried using Q = CV to find the charge on the capacitor at that point, but it gave me 1.5 x 10-4C which is not the answer given. i also used the third equation given to get the charge, given the time- but the e term was negative, giving a negative amount of charge. the answer given in the book is 6\muC, but i can't see how to get this.
 
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alexburns1991 said:

The Attempt at a Solution



the initial charging current wasnt a problem, using V=IR.
I0 = 60\muA

Double-check your math. 6V, 50kΩ, ___μA?
 
sorry i copied the question wrong, it was meant to be 100kilo ohms.
i still don't see how you can get the answer given though.
 
What are "pd's"?

What is a "half time"? Is this a "half-life"? If you meant "time constant" (i.e. RC), then that would be incorrect. The quantity (say current) reduces to one-half in a bit less than one time constant of decay. (Remember, the current is the time derivative of the charge, which is an exponential function of time.) Hmm... I guess your result for 3V on the cap and res should be correct anyway.
 
alexburns1991 said:
from there on, i struggled to get the pd's but i realized that one half time had gone seeing as the current had halved so the pd must be 3V on each.

because the current has halved, the potential difference across the resistor must also have
halved because of ohms low. So it is indeed 3V. The rest of the 6V must be across the capacitor.
i tried using Q = CV to find the charge on the capacitor at that point, but it gave me 1.5 x 10-4C which is not the answer given. i also used the third equation given to get the charge, given the time- but the e term was negative, giving a negative amount of charge. the answer given in the book is 6\muC, but i can't see how to get this.

if your statement of the problem is correct, 1.5*10^-4 C is the right answer.

the e term can't go negative BTW. if t>0 and R>0 and C>0 then -t/RC < 0 so e^{-t/RC} &lt; 1 and 1- e^{-t/RC} &gt; 0
 
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