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- Capacitive Charging, Discharging, and Simple Waveshaping Circuits
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- Circuit
- Capacitor charging and discharging
- Transient voltages and currents result when circuit is switched
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4
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- Charging a capacitor that is discharged
- When switch is closed, the current instantaneously jumps to E/R
- Exponentially decays to zero
- When switching, the capacitor looks like a short circuit
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- Voltage begins at zero and exponentially increases to E volts
- Capacitor voltage cannot change instantaneously
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- Capacitor voltage has shape shown:
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- Circuit is at steady state
- When voltage and current reach their final values and stop changing
- Capacitor has voltage across it, but no current flows through the
circuit
- Capacitor looks like an open circuit
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8
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- Assume capacitor has E volts across it when it begins to discharge
- Current will instantly jump to –E/R
- Both voltage and current will decay exponentially to zero
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- Here are the decay waveforms:
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10
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- Voltages and currents in a charging circuit do not change
instantaneously
- These changes over time are exponential changes
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- Equation for voltage across the capacitor as a function of time is
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12
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- Voltage across resistor is found from KVL: E - vC
- The current in the circuit is
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13
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- Values may be determined from these equations
- Waveforms are shown to right
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14
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- Rate at which a capacitor charges depends on product of R and C
- Product known as time constant
- t = RC
- t (Greek letter tau) has units
of seconds
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- Length of time that a transient lasts depends on exponential function e-t/t
- As t increases
- Function decreases
- When the t reaches infinity, the function decays to zero
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- For all practical purposes, transients can be considered to last for
only five time constants
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- Voltage denoted as V0
- Capacitor has a voltage on it
- Voltage and current in a circuit will be affected by initial voltage
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- If a capacitor is charged to voltage V0 and then discharged,
the equations become
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- Current is negative because it flows opposite to reference direction
- Discharge transients last five time constants
- All voltages and currents are at zero when capacitor has fully
discharged
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- Curves shown represent voltage and current during discharge
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22
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- You may have to use Thévenin’s theorem (those with multiple resistors)
- Remove capacitor as the load and determine Thévenin equivalent circuit
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23
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- Use RTh to determine t
- t = RTh∙C
- Use ETh as the equivalent source voltage
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- RC circuits
- Used to create delays for alarm, motor control, and timing applications
- Alarm unit shown contains a threshold detector
- When input to this detector exceeds a preset value, the alarm is turned
on
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- Pulse
- Voltage or current that changes from one level to another and back
again
- Periodic waveform
- Pulse train is a repetitive stream of pulses
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- Square wave
- Waveform’s time high equals its time low
- Length of each cycle of a pulse train is its period
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- Number of pulses per second is its pulse repetition frequency
- Width of pulse compared to its period is its duty cycle
- Usually given as a percentage
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- Pulses have a rise and fall time
- Because they do not rise and fall instantaneously
- Rise and fall times are measured between the 10% and 90% points
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30
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- Width of pulse relative to a circuit’s time constant
- Determines how it is affected by an RC circuit
- If pulse width >> 5t
- Capacitor charges and discharges fully
- With the output taken across the resistor, this is a differentiator
circuit
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- If pulse width = 5t
- Capacitor fully charges and discharges during each
pulse
- If the pulse width << 5t
- Capacitor cannot fully charge and discharge
- This is an integrator circuit
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- Circuit (a) provides approximate integration if 5t >>T
- Circuit (b) provides approximate differentiation if T >> 5t
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34
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- Capacitance
- Occurs when conductors are separated by insulating material
- Leads to stray capacitance
- In high-speed circuits this can cause problems
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