Unit-2. Electrostatics - Short Solutions
Part A: Definitions (1-2 marks)
Electric Field (E)
Force per unit positive charge at a point.
E = F/q₀ = kQ/r²
Unit: N/C or V/m
Electric Potential (V)
Work done to bring unit positive charge from infinity to a point.
V = W/q = kQ/r
Unit: Volt (V) or J/C
Electric Potential Difference (ΔV)
Work done to move unit charge from one point to another.
ΔV = W/q = V₂ - V₁
Unit: Volt (V)
Electric Flux (Φ)
Number of electric field lines passing through a surface.
Φ = E·A = EA cos θ
Unit: N·m²/C or V·m
Capacitor
Device that stores electric charge and energy. Two conducting plates separated by dielectric.
Capacitance (C)
Ability to store charge. Ratio of charge to potential difference.
C = Q/V
C (parallel plate) = ε₀εᵣA/d
Unit: Farad (F)
Part B: Detailed Answers (2-3 marks)
(1) Coulomb's Law
Electric force between two stationary point charges is directly proportional to product of charges and inversely proportional to square of distance.
F = kq₁q₂/r²
k = 9×10⁹ N·m²/C²
Nature:
- Like charges: Repulsive
- Unlike charges: Attractive
(2) Characteristics of Electric Field Lines
- Start/End: Start from +ve, end at -ve charges
- Direction: Tangent shows field direction
- No intersection: Lines never cross
- Density: Close lines = strong field, far lines = weak field
- Uniform field: Parallel and equidistant
- Imaginary: Lines are imaginary, field is real
- Perpendicular: Always perpendicular to conductor surface
- Open curves: Never form closed loops
(3) Parallel Plate Capacitor
Construction: Two parallel conducting plates of area A separated by distance d with dielectric between.
Capacitance:
C = ε₀εᵣA/d = ε₀KA/d
Factors affecting C:
- C ∝ A (area)
- C ∝ 1/d (distance)
- C ∝ K (dielectric constant)
Applications: Energy storage, filtering, timing circuits, coupling/decoupling
(4) Series Connection of Capacitors
Characteristics:
- Same charge: Q₁ = Q₂ = Q₃ = Q
- Different voltages: V = V₁ + V₂ + V₃
Formula:
1/Cₛ = 1/C₁ + 1/C₂ + 1/C₃
For 2 capacitors: Cₛ = C₁C₂/(C₁+C₂)
For n equal: Cₛ = C/n
Result: Cₛ < smallest capacitance
(5) Parallel Connection of Capacitors
Characteristics:
- Same voltage: V₁ = V₂ = V₃ = V
- Different charges: Q = Q₁ + Q₂ + Q₃
Formula:
Cₚ = C₁ + C₂ + C₃
For n equal: Cₚ = nC
Result: Cₚ > largest capacitance
(6) Effect of Dielectric on Capacitance
When dielectric (K) inserted between plates:
Capacitance increases:
C = KC₀
Why it increases:
- Dielectric molecules polarize
- Reduces electric field: E = E₀/K
- Reduces voltage: V = V₀/K
- Same charge, lower voltage → higher capacitance
Other effects:
- Increases breakdown voltage
- Provides mechanical support
- Makes capacitor compact
Part C: Numericals (3 marks)
(1) Coulomb force
Given: q₁ = 20 μC, q₂ = 10 μC, r = 0.02 m, k = 9×10⁹
F = kq₁q₂/r²
F = (9×10⁹)(20×10⁻⁶)(10×10⁻⁶)/(0.02)²
F = 1800×10⁻³/4×10⁻⁴ = 4500 N
Answer: 4500 N (repulsive)
(2) Potential difference
Given: W = 1600 J, q = 25 C
V = W/q = 1600/25 = 64 V
Answer: 64 V
(3) Capacitance
Given: Q = 60 μC, V = 12 V
C = Q/V = 60×10⁻⁶/12 = 5×10⁻⁶ F = 5 μF
Answer: 5 μF
(4) Series and Parallel (3 × 10μF)
Series:
Cₛ = C/n = 10/3 = 3.33 μF
Parallel:
Cₚ = nC = 3×10 = 30 μF
Answer: Series = 3.33 μF, Parallel = 30 μF
(5) Capacitance of small capacitor
Given: A = 10 mm² = 10⁻⁵ m², d = 1 mm = 10⁻³ m
C = ε₀A/d = (8.85×10⁻¹²)(10⁻⁵)/(10⁻³)
C = 8.85×10⁻¹⁴ F = 0.0885 pF
Answer: 8.85×10⁻¹⁴ F
(6) Area for 1F capacitor
Given: C = 1 F, d = 1 mm = 10⁻³ m
A = Cd/ε₀ = (1)(10⁻³)/(8.85×10⁻¹²)
A = 1.13×10⁸ m² = 113 km²
Answer: 1.13×10⁸ m² (113 km²) - Shows 1F is huge!
(7) Mixed Circuit
Example: (C₁ ∥ C₂) in series with C₃ Given: C₁ = 10 μF, C₂ = 20 μF, C₃ = 30 μF
Step 1: Parallel
C₁₂ = C₁ + C₂ = 10 + 20 = 30 μF
Step 2: Series with C₃
1/Cₜ = 1/30 + 1/30 = 2/30
Cₜ = 15 μF
Answer: 15 μF
Quick Reference
Formulas
Coulomb's Law: F = kq₁q₂/r², k = 9×10⁹
Electric Field: E = F/q = kQ/r²
Potential: V = W/q = kQ/r
Flux: Φ = EA cos θ
Capacitance: C = Q/V = ε₀εᵣA/d
Series: 1/Cₛ = 1/C₁ + 1/C₂ + 1/C₃
Parallel: Cₚ = C₁ + C₂ + C₃
With dielectric: C = KC₀
Energy: U = ½QV = ½CV² = Q²/(2C)
Constants
k = 9×10⁹ N·m²/C²
ε₀ = 8.85×10⁻¹² F/m
e = 1.6×10⁻¹⁹ C
1 μF = 10⁻⁶ F
1 nF = 10⁻⁹ F
1 pF = 10⁻¹² F
Short Solutions - Unit 2