Understanding Time-Dependent Behavior in Capacitor–Resistor Circuits

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25 Terms

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RC circuit

A circuit containing at least one resistor (R) and one capacitor (C), notable because currents and voltages can change with time even with a DC source.

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Resistor (R)

A circuit element that relates voltage drop to current; it controls how fast charge can flow in an RC transient.

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Capacitor (C)

A device that stores charge on two separated plates; its voltage depends on stored charge and it introduces time dependence in circuits.

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Ohm’s law (resistor voltage relation)

The voltage across a resistor is proportional to current: v_R = iR.

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Capacitor charge–voltage relation

The charge on a capacitor is proportional to its voltage: q = Cv_C.

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Capacitor current relation

The current through a capacitor is proportional to the rate of change of its voltage: i = C(dv_C/dt).

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Passive sign convention

A sign convention where an element’s voltage is taken positive when current enters the element’s labeled positive terminal, helping keep KVL equations consistent.

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Kirchhoff’s loop rule (KVL)

The sum of potential changes around a closed loop is zero; used to set up the differential equations for RC charging/discharging.

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RC transient

The time-dependent charging or discharging behavior in an RC circuit, typically described by exponential functions.

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Time constant (τ)

The characteristic time scale for an RC circuit: τ = RC (or τ = R_eq C in more complex circuits).

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Meaning of one time constant

After time τ, an exponential quantity has moved about 63% of the way from its initial value toward its final value (or decayed to about 37% of its initial value).

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Charging differential equation (series RC with battery)

For capacitor voltage during charging: dvC/dt = (ℰ − vC)/(RC).

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Charging capacitor voltage solution

For vC(0)=0 in series with a DC battery: vC(t) = ℰ(1 − e^{−t/(RC)}).

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Charging capacitor charge solution

During charging from 0 V: q(t) = Cℰ(1 − e^{−t/(RC)}).

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Charging current solution

During charging: i(t) = (ℰ/R)e^{−t/(RC)}, which decays exponentially to 0.

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Discharging differential equation (RC only)

With no battery: dvC/dt = −vC/(RC).

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Discharging capacitor voltage solution

If vC(0)=V0: vC(t) = V0 e^{−t/(RC)}.

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Discharging current sign interpretation

Using i = C(dvC/dt) can yield i(t) = −(V0/R)e^{−t/(RC)}; a negative sign usually means the true current is opposite the chosen positive direction.

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General approach-to-final form (unifying equation)

A first-order RC quantity moves exponentially from initial to final value: vC(t)=v∞ + (v0 − v∞)e^{−t/τ}.

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DC steady state (for capacitors)

Long after switching with DC sources, dvC/dt = 0 so iC = 0; an ideal capacitor behaves like an open circuit.

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Continuity of capacitor voltage

A capacitor’s voltage cannot change instantaneously, so vC(0^+) = vC(0^−) at a switching event.

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Equivalent resistance seen by the capacitor (R_eq)

The resistance between the capacitor’s terminals in the post-switch configuration (with sources turned off appropriately), used in τ = R_eq C.

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Turning off independent sources (for finding R_eq)

To compute R_eq: replace independent voltage sources with shorts and independent current sources with opens, then find the resistance seen at the capacitor terminals.

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Energy stored in a capacitor

Energy in the electric field of a capacitor at voltage V: U_C = (1/2)CV^2.

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Steady-state capacitor voltage in a divider (capacitor in parallel with R_2)

With R1 and R2 as a series divider across battery ℰ, and the capacitor across R2: vC(∞) = ℰ·R2/(R1 + R_2).

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