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Question

Question: A \(15\mu F\) capacitor is connected to 220 V, 50 Hz source. Find the peak current....

A 15μF15\mu F capacitor is connected to 220 V, 50 Hz source. Find the peak current.

Explanation

Solution

Hint The voltage is non constant, and can be considered as a sine function. When voltage value is stated, the root mean square value is used. The peak value is equal to the root means squared value multiplied by the square root of two.
In this solution we will be using the following formula;
i=Cdvdt\Rightarrow i = C\dfrac{{dv}}{{dt}}
Where ii is the instantaneous current at a particular time tt on a capacitor, CC is the capacitance of the capacitor and vv is the instantaneous voltage across the capacitor at the same corresponding time tt.

Complete step by step answer
In the question, we have that a capacitor is connected to 220 V, 50 Hz source. Hence, mathematically, the voltage can be given as,
v=Vpsinft=vrms2sin2πft\Rightarrow v = {V_p}\sin ft = {v_{rms}}\sqrt 2 \sin 2\pi ft
v=2202sin2π(50)t\Rightarrow v = 220\sqrt 2 \sin 2\pi \left( {50} \right)t
Hence, by differentiating, we have that
dvdt=11000×2π2cos2π50t\Rightarrow \dfrac{{dv}}{{dt}} = 11000 \times 2\pi \sqrt 2 \cos 2\pi \cdot 50t
The instantaneous current in the presence of a capacitor is given as
i=Cdvdt\Rightarrow i = C\dfrac{{dv}}{{dt}}, where CC is the capacitance of the capacitor.
Hence substituting the voltage expression from above and the capacitance value from the question, we have that
i=15×106×11000×2π2cos2π50t\Rightarrow i = 15 \times {10^{ - 6}} \times 11000 \times 2\pi \sqrt 2 \cos 2\pi \cdot 50t
Hence, by computation, we have
i=1.47cos2π50t\Rightarrow i = 1.47\cos 2\pi \cdot 50t
Hence, the peak value of the current is 1.47A{\text{1}}{\text{.47A}}.

Note
For clarity, we shall derive the expression of the instantaneous current, i=Cdvdti = C\dfrac{{dv}}{{dt}}.
In general, the charge in a capacitor is defined simply as
Q=Cv\Rightarrow Q = Cv. The current flowing through the capacitor is hence given as
i=dQdt\Rightarrow i = \dfrac{{dQ}}{{dt}}, thus from the expression of the charge above, we have that
i=dQdt=d(Cv)dt=Cdvdt\Rightarrow i = \dfrac{{dQ}}{{dt}} = \dfrac{{d\left( {Cv} \right)}}{{dt}} = C\dfrac{{dv}}{{dt}} (since the capacitance is a constant)
Hence, finally
i=Cdvdt\Rightarrow i = C\dfrac{{dv}}{{dt}}
Also, capacitors only allow AC current to flow through them. As we see, if the voltage is a constant, then
dvdt=0\Rightarrow \dfrac{{dv}}{{dt}} = 0
Hence, we have that
i=Cdvdt=0\Rightarrow i = C\dfrac{{dv}}{{dt}} = 0.