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A 4.4-µF capacitor is initially connected to a 5.1-V battery. Once the capacitor is fully charged the battery is removed and a 2.0-Ω resistor is connected between the two terminals of the capacitor. Find the charge on the capacitor at the following times. (When entering units, use micro for the metric system prefix µ.)

User Nyxtom
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1 Answer

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Question is incomplete. Missing part:

Find the charge on the capacitor at the following times:

1) t = 0 mu S

2) t = 1 mu S

3) t = 50 mu S

1)
22.4 \mu C

We start by calculating the initial charge on the capacitor. For this, we can use the following relationship:


C=(Q_0)/(V_0)

where

C is the capacitance

Q0 is the initial charge stored

V0 is the initial potential difference across the capacitor

When the capacitor is connected to the battery, we have:


C=4.4\mu F = 4.4\cdot 10^(-6)F


V_0 = 5.1 V

Solving for
Q_0,


Q_0 = CV_0 = (4.4\cdot 10^(-6))(5.1)=2.24 \cdot 10^(-5) C = 22.4 \mu C

So, when the battery is disconnected, this is the charge on the capacitor at time t = 0.

2)
20.0\mu C

To find the charge on the capacitor at any other time t, we use the equation:


Q(t) = Q_0 e^{-(t)/(RC)}

where


Q_0 = 22.4 \mu C

t is the time


R=2.0 \Omega is the resistance


C=4.4\mu F is the capacitance

Therefore, at time
t=1 \mu s, we have:


Q(t) = (22.4) e^{-(1)/((2.0)(4.4))}=20.0 \mu C

3)
0.08 \mu C

As before, we use again the equation:


Q(t) = Q_0 e^{-(t)/(RC)}

However, here the time to consider is


t=50 \mu C

Substituting into the formula,


Q(t) = (22.4) e^{-(50.0)/((2.0)(4.4))}=0.08 \mu C

User Ckarst
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