Electric forces and electric fields
1. Proprieties of electric charges Electric charge can be + or – Like charges repel one another; and unlike
charges attract one another Electric charge is always conserved
The object become charged because – charge is transferred from one object to another
An object may have charge of ±e, ±2e, ±3e e = 1.60219x10-19C SI unit: C (Coulomb)
2 Insulators and conductors In conductors, electric charges move freely in
response to an electric force. All other materials are called insulators (give an ex. of each)
Semiconductors are between conductors and insulators.
An object connected to a conducting wire buried in the Earth is said to be grounded.
Induction – charging of a conductor Charging an object by induction requires no
contact with the object inducing the charge.
3. Coulomb’s Law An electric force has the following properties: It is directing along a line joining the two
particles and is inversely proportional to the square of the separation distance r, between them
It is proportional to the product of the magnitudes of the charges, |q1|and |q2|, of the 2 particles
It is attractive if the charges are of the opposite sign, and repulsive if the charges have the same sign
The magnitude of the electric force: F=ke (|q1||q2|/r2)
ke – Coulomb constant
ke = 8.9875x109N m2/C2
4. Electric Field The electric field E produced by a charge
Q at the location of a small “test” charge qo is defined as the electric force F exerted by Q and qo divided by the charge qo .
E=F/qo
E=ke (|q|/r2)
Si unit : N/C
Pb. Strategies: 1. Draw a diagram of the charges 2. Identify the charge of interest 3. Convert all units in SI 4. Apply Coulomb’s Law 5. Sum all the x- components of the
resulting electric force 6. Sum all the y-components of the
resulting electric force 7. Use Pythagorean theorem to find the
magnitude and the direction of the force
5. Electric field lines 1. The electric field E is tangent to the electric
field lines at each point 2. The number of lines per unit area through a
surface perpendicular to the lines is proportional to the strength of the electric field in a given region
Rules for drawing electric field lines: -The lines for a group of point charges must
begin on + charge and end on – charge - The number of lines drawn leaving a + charge
or ending a – charge is proportional to the magnitude of the charge
- No two field lines can cross each other
6. Conductors in electrostatic equilibrium When no net motion of charge occurs within a
conductor, the conductor is in electrostatic equilibrium
Proprieties of an isolated conductor: 1. the electric field is zero inside of the material 2. any excess charge on an isolated conductor resides
entirely on its surface 3. the electric field just outside a charge conductor is
perpendicular to the conductor’s surface 4. On an irregularly shaped conductor , the charge
accumulates at sharp points, where the radius of curvature of the surface is smallest
7.electric flux and Gauss’s Law The electric flux ( the number of the field
lines) is proportional to the product of the electric field and surface of the area
ΦE =EA
ΦE =EA cosθ
For a close surface, the flux line passing into the interior of the volume are negative, and those passing out of the interior of the volume are positive
Gauss’s Law: E= ke q|/r2
A= 4πr2
ΦE =EA=4π ke q ΦE =q/ εo Permittivity of free space: εo=1/(4π ke )=8.85x10-12C2/Nm2
The electric flux through any closed surface is equal to the net charge inside the surface divided by the permittivity
8. Potential difference and electrical potential
Work and potential energy: Potential energy is a scalar quantity with
change to the negative of the work done by the conservative force
ΔPE=Pef-Pei =- Wf Coulomb force is conservative If imagine a small + charge placed in a
uniform electric field E. As the charge moves from A to B, the work done on the charge by the electric field:
W=FxΔx =q Ex (xf-xi)
Work –energy theorem W=q Ex Δx =ΔKE But the work done by a conservative force
can be reinterpreted as the negative of the charge in a potential energy associated with that force
ΔPE of a system consisting on an object of charge q through a displacement Δx in a constant electric field E is given by:
ΔPE =-WAB= -q Ex Δx SI unit J (Joule)
Δ KE + ΔPE el = ΔKE +(0-ΙqΙ E d) =0 ΔKE = ΙqΙ E d Similarly , KE equal in magnitude to the
loss of gravitational potential energy: ΔKE +ΔPEg =ΔKE +(0 –mgd) =0 ΔKE=mgd
Electric Potential F = qE The electric potential difference between
points A and B is the charge in electric potential energy as a charge q moves from A to B, divided by the charge q: ΔV =VA-VB = ΔPE/q
SI unit J/C or V (Joule/Coulomb or Volt) Electric potential is a scalar quantity
9.Electric potential and potential energy due to point charges
The electric field of a point charge extends throughout space, so its electrical potential also
Electric potential created by a point charge: V=ke q/r
The electric potential of two or more charges is obtained by applying the superposition principle: the total electric potential at some point P due to several point charges is the algebraic sum of the V due to the individual charges
10.Potentials and charged conductors The electric potential at all points on a
charged conductor W= -ΔPE =-q( VB-VA) No net work is required to move a charge
between two points that are at the same electric potential
All points on the surface of a charged conductor in electrostatic equilibrium are at the same potential
The electric potential is a constant everywhere on the surface of a charged conductor
The electric potential is constant everywhere inside a conductor and equal to the same value at the surface
The electron volt is defined as KE that an electron gains when accelerated through a potential difference of 1V
1eV =1.6x 10-19 C V =1.6x10-19 J
Equipotential surface is a surface on which all points are at the same potential
The electric field at every point of an equipotential surface is perpendicular to the surface.
11.Capacitance A capacitor- is a device used in variety of
electric circuits The capacitance C of a capacitor is the
ratio of the magnitude of the charge on either conductor (plate) to the magnitude of the potential difference between conductors (plates)
C=Q/ΔV SI unit F (Farad)=C/V
12.The parallel-plate capacitor
C=q/ΔVΔV=Ed; E=σ/ε0 ; q=σAC=σA/Ed=σA/(σε0)d
C= ε0A/d
Symbols for circuit elements and circuits
13 Combinations of capacitorsCapacitor in Parallel
Capacitors in parallel both have the same potential difference across them
Q=Q1+Q2
Q1= C1ΔV
Q2 = C2ΔV
Q= Ceq ΔV
CeqΔV=C1ΔV+C2ΔV
Ceq=C1+C2 (parallel combination)
Capacitors in series
Electrical Energy and Capacitance
For a series combination of capacitors, the magnitude of the charge must be the same on all the plates
ΔV=Q/Ceq
ΔV1=Q/C1; ΔV2=Q/C2; ΔV=ΔV1+ΔV2
Q/C= Q/C1+Q/C2
1/C= 1/C1+1/C2 (series combination)
14. Capacitors with dielectrics
A Dielectric- is an insulating material (rubber, plastic, waxed paper)
If a dielectric is inserted between the plates, the voltage across the plates is reduced by a factor k (dielectric constant) to the value:
ΔV =ΔV0/k C=k C0
C=kε0 A/d The maximum electric field is called
dielectric strength