Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Alan Horowitz wrote:
when a current just starts flowing into a RL or RC circuit, how does the voltage "know" that it should be increasing exactly 63% during each time-constant period? And whence the number 63%? Let's try another way. You can actually experiment yourself. Take a 1000uF electrolytic cap and charge it up to +5V, then disconnect the power supply. Put your voltmeter on the cap terminals and read +5V. Now take a 10k resistor and put it across the terminals as well. The cap discharges slowly. In the first moment the discharge current was 5V/10k = 0.5mA. With this current the cap would be discharged in 10s, this is the time constant "tau" = RC But since the voltage is dropping also the discharge current drops. Now you can use a stopwatch and read the voltage after 10s and you find it to be 1.84V, which is (1-0.624)5V. So this is where your 63% come from. Since we are discharging, the value is 37% of the initial voltage. You can also note down the values for 20s, 30s etc. until your meter has no more resolution and find the corresponding values for multiple time constants. BTW you do not need to do this experiment yourself but use a simulator or solve the equations others have already written in their answers. -- ciao Ban Bordighera, Italy |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|