There are several formal analogies that can be made between electricity, which is invisible to the eye, and more familiar physical behaviors, such as the flowing of water or the motion of mechanical devices.
In the case of capacitance, one analogy to a capacitor in mechanical rectilineal terms is a spring where the compliance of the spring is analogous to the capacitance. Thus in electrical engineering, a capacitor may be defined as an ideal electrical component which satisfies the equation
V=
1 | |
C |
\intIdt,
where
V
C
I
t
The equation quoted above has the same form as that describing an ideal massless spring:
F=k\intvdt
F
k
v
Note that in the electrical case, current (I) is defined as the rate of change of charge (Q) with respect to time:
I=
dQ | |
dt |
While in the mechanical case, velocity (v) is defined as the rate of change of displacement (x) with respect to time:
v=
dx | |
dt |
Thus, in this analogy:
Also, these analogous relationships apply:
1 | |
2 |
kx2
1 | |
2 |
Q2 | |
C |
=
1 | |
2 |
CV2
This analogy of the capacitor forms part of the more comprehensive impedance analogy of mechanical to electrical systems.