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Slow AC with a capacitor and an inductor

Demonstration

A good way to show phase differences in capacitive and inductive circuits.

Apparatus and materials


Technical notes

1 Electrolytic capacitors should normally be used only on direct voltages of the correct polarity. However, they may work well in these slow AC experiments. The lack of any direct polarizing voltage may cause some deterioration of the dielectric in these capacitors. It is a wise precaution to 'form' the plates before and after use. This is done by connecting the capacitors to DC with a voltage less than or equal to the working voltage of the capacitor and of the correct polarity.
 
2 A low frequency AC generator consists of a coil of resistance wire, with a rotating pair of contacts. A smooth low-voltage DC supply is connected across the coil of the generator. The metal brushes rotate in contact with the coil and are connected to the AC output terminals, giving an alternating output.

Safety

Read our standard health & safety guidance

Procedure

a Connect 3 V, DC across the input of the low frequency AC generator. Connect the voltmeter across the output. Put the output also through the milliammeter in series with the 500 μF capacitor. Set the pointers of the meters to their centre positions.
 
b Turn the generator slowly and show the phase difference.
 
c Repeat with the inductor in place of the capacitor. Observe the phase difference.
 
Slow a.c. with a capacitor and an inductor


Teaching notes

1 This demonstration shows that the current to a capacitor leads the supply voltage by 90 degrees. The current through the inductor lags behind the supply voltage. If it is a very large inductor, then this lag will be about 90 degrees. However all inductors have some resistance and the lag may well be less than 90 degrees because the effects of the resistance and the inductance interact.
 
2 A circuit with resistance, capacitance and inductance could be set up for demonstration, but the phase difference would then be a complicated vector sum.
 
3 With a resistor, both V and I are positive at the same time and negative at the same time, and so the power at any instant is always positive, Vrms x I rms. With a capacitor or an inductor, the current and voltage are not in phase, and in extreme cases the power might be zero. The energy just surges in and out of the magnetic field of the inductor, or piles up in the field between the plates of the capacitor and then comes pouring back again. An inductor and capacitor connected in parallel will become an oscillator. If interested, look at a tuned circuit such as in a radio.
 
This experiment was safety-checked in January 2007

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Slow AC with a capacitor and an inductor http://www.practicalphysics.org/go/Experiment_697.html

A good way to show phase differences in capacitive and inductive circuits.

Updated 28 May 2009

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