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Capacitors and phase

Take a look at how the voltage across the capacitor and current through the circuit (and thus the capacitor) act over time. Notice that when the voltage is high the current is low and vice-versa. This is a bit counterintuitive because Ohm's law says that the voltage and current should always be proportional to each other. A resistor has a constant resistance and therefore has a constant opposition to current flow. A discharged capacitor has no opposition to current flow. It looks like a 0 ohm resistor; a short circuit. As a capacitor charges, its opposition to current flow increases. Once charged it has infinite opposition to current flow; an open circuit. It acts almost like a resistor that changes its resistance as it charges. Take another look at the demonstration circuit at 1 time constant. The capacitor has 6.32 volts across it and has 3.68 amps of current flowing through it. Danged if it doesn't look like a 1.72 ohm resistor. However, it only does for that moment in time. As it charges the resistance appears to increase.

Capacitors do not violate Ohm's law. They just present fewer ohms when conducting a high current and more ohms when conducting a low current. This “disconnect” between voltage and current is called phase or phase angle. We'll learn more about this than we want to in AC circuits.


Capacitors Part 5 - Capacitors and Phase
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