登录

An LC circuit consists of an inductor and a capacitor, either in series or parallel. Consider a charged capacitor connected with an inductor in series. Before the switch is closed, all the energy of the circuit is stored in the electric field of the capacitor. When the switch is closed, the capacitor begins to discharge, producing a current in the circuit. The current, in turn, creates a magnetic field in the inductor. Because of the induced emf in the inductor, the current cannot change instantaneously; it starts at zero and eventually builds up to a maximum value. During this buildup, the capacitor is discharging. At each instant, the capacitor potential equals the induced emf, so as the capacitor discharges, the rate of change of current decreases. When the capacitor potential becomes zero, the induced emf is also zero, and the current has leveled off at its maximum value.

The net effect of this process is a transfer of energy from the capacitor with its diminishing electric field, to the inductor with its increasing magnetic field. Since there is no resistance in the circuit, no energy is lost through Joule heating; thus, the maximum energy stored in the capacitor is equal to the maximum energy stored later in the inductor. At any arbitrary time, the total energy of an LC circuit is the sum of electrical and magnetic energy. Therefore, energy remains conserved in an LC circuit. This is analogous to the mechanical oscillations of a mass attached at the end of a spring. In this case, energy is transferred back and forth between the mass, which has kinetic energy, and the spring, which has potential energy. In the LC circuit, the capacitor charge q plays the role of the displacement x, and the current is analogous to the particle's velocity. The inductance is analogous to the mass m, and the reciprocal of the capacitance is analogous to the force constant k.

Tags
LC CircuitInductorCapacitorSeriesParallelElectric FieldMagnetic FieldDischargeInduced EmfCurrentEnergy TransferJoule HeatingEnergy ConservationMechanical OscillationsMass spring AnalogyChargeDisplacementInductanceCapacitanceForce Constant

来自章节 31:

article

Now Playing

31.10 : LC Circuits

Inductance

2.3K Views

article

31.1 : 互感

Inductance

2.2K Views

article

31.2 : 自感应

Inductance

2.2K Views

article

31.3 : 自感的计算

Inductance

205 Views

article

31.4 : 电感

Inductance

5.3K Views

article

31.5 : 磁场中的能量

Inductance

2.1K Views

article

31.6 : 同轴电缆中存储的能量

Inductance

1.3K Views

article

31.7 : RL 电路

Inductance

2.3K Views

article

31.8 : RL 电路中的电流增长和衰减

Inductance

3.4K Views

article

31.9 : RL 和 RC 电路之间的比较

Inductance

3.5K Views

article

31.11 : LC 电路中的振荡

Inductance

2.1K Views

article

31.12 : RLC 系列电路

Inductance

2.6K Views

article

31.13 : RLC Circuit as a Damped Oscillator

Inductance

760 Views

JoVE Logo

政策

使用条款

隐私

科研

教育

关于 JoVE

版权所属 © 2025 MyJoVE 公司版权所有,本公司不涉及任何医疗业务和医疗服务。