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A semiquantitative treatment of surface charges in DC circuits

Rainer Müller

Citation: Am. J. Phys. 80, 782 (2012); doi: 10.1119/1.4731722


View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1119/1.4731722
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Published by the American Association of Physics Teachers

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A semiquantitative treatment of surface charges in DC circuits
Rainer Müllera)
Technische Universität Braunschweig, Physikdidaktik, Bienroder Weg 82, D-38106 Braunschweig, Germany
(Received 21 November 2011; accepted 13 June 2012)
Surface charges play a major role in DC circuits because they help generate the electric field and
potential distributions necessary to move the charges around the circuit. Unfortunately, it is
generally regarded as a difficult task to determine the surface charge distribution for all but the
simplest geometries. In this paper, we develop a graphical method for the approximate construction
of surface charge distributions in DC circuits. This method allows us to determine (approximately)
the location and the amount of surface charge for almost any circuit geometry. The accuracy of this
semi-quantitative method is limited only by one’s ability to draw equipotential lines. We illustrate
the method with several examples. VC 2012 American Association of Physics Teachers.
[http://dx.doi.org/10.1119/1.4731722]

I. INTRODUCTION dez and Assis,6,7 and Davis and Kaplan8 have found analyti-
cal solutions for several simple geometries. A qualitative
The simple DC circuit is a basic component of every approach to more complex geometries, including conductors
physics curriculum, which leads one to think that all details with varying diameter and resistance, has been given by
about this common system are well known and understood. Haertel.9 Meanwhile, Galili and Goibargh,10 Harbola,11 and
Yet several authors1–12 have pointed out an important gap in Davis and Kaplan8 have discussed the role of surface charges
the usual presentations of the subject. In discussions of the for the energy transport from the battery to a resistor, and
Drude model, for example, it is said that the electrons in a Preyer has carried out numerical simulations to determine
wire are guided by an electric field located inside the con- the distribution of surface charges.12
ductor with a direction parallel to the wire at any point. This There seems to be general agreement that the distribution of
statement might be puzzling to students who remember that, surface charges is too complex to be determined by any simple
in the context of a Faraday cage, there is a proof that there is rules.3 Indeed, Heald spells out the difficulty as follows: the
no electric field inside a conductor. If this is true, how can distribution of surface charges “depends on the detailed geo-
there be an electric field in a current-carrying wire? What metry of the circuit itself and even of its surroundings. For
kind of charges are generating it and where do they reside in instance, we would have to specify exactly how the pieces of
a DC circuit? hookup wire are bent. And since most real-world circuits have
For a physicist, it is evident that the Faraday cage argu- rather complicated geometries, the mathematical difficulty of
ment does not apply to the DC circuit. The Faraday cage is making this calculation is forbidding.”5
in electrostatic equilibrium, whereas the wire is in a station- In this paper, we show that the situation is not as hopeless
ary non-equilibrium state. In their textbook, Chabay and as the above statement might suggest. We specify a simple
Sherwood lucidly illustrate the transition from the electro- method for the graphical construction of surface charge dis-
static to the DC case.1 tributions in two-dimensional DC circuits. Using this
The origin of the electric field inside a long straight wire method, we can determine the location and the amount of
has been discussed by Sommerfeld.2 He found that the field surface charge in a semi-quantitative manner for almost arbi-
inside the conductor is generated by charges that are located trarily complex circuit geometries. The accuracy of the
at the surface of the wire and are therefore called surface method is limited only by one’s ability to draw equipotential
charges. Jackson has identified three roles for these surface lines.
charges in real circuits:3 (1) they maintain the potential
around the circuit, (2) they provide the electric field in the
space outside of the conductor, and (3) they assure the con- II. TWO TYPES OF SURFACE CHARGES
fined flow of current by generating an electric field that is
parallel to the wire. The latter role can be nicely illustrated Surface charges occur in two different ways that must be
by a straight wire that is being bent while the current is flow- treated separately. We distinguish surface charges of types I
ing.1 In this case, a simple feedback mechanism ensures that and II as described below. It must be stressed that both types
the electric field follows the wire even after it is bent: of surface charges act together to fulfill the three roles men-
charges accumulate on the inner and outer edges of the bend tioned earlier.
until the additional field generated by the newly accumulated Type-I surface charges occur at the boundary of two con-
surface charges forces the flowing electrons to follow the ductors with different resistivities (e.g., at the interface
wire. The accumulation process takes place very quickly— between a wire and a resistor). In order to keep the current
effectively instantaneous from a macroscopic perspective— constant, the electric field must be larger inside the resistor.
and is complete as soon as the total electric field points along Therefore, type-I surface charges accumulate at the interface
the wire at any place inside the conductor. The resulting pat- between the two materials and contribute to the extra field
tern of surface charges, however, is quite complicated and inside the resistor. (A more accurate name would be inter-
cannot be determined by straightforward arguments. face charges.)
Over the years, several authors have discussed different Type-II surface charges reside at the surface of con-
aspects of surface charges. Jefimenko has demonstrated their ductors; they sit at the boundary between a conductor and
existence experimentally,4 while Jackson,3 Heald,5 Hernan- the surrounding medium (usually air). The charges that

782 Am. J. Phys. 80 (9), September 2012 http://aapt.org/ajp C 2012 American Association of Physics Teachers
V 782

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accumulate at the edges of a bent wire are an example of this
type of surface charge.

A. The field discontinuity and the kink


in the equipotential lines
Let us adapt some well-known facts from electrostatics
to the case of DC circuits. We will use the microscopic
Maxwell equations throughout this paper so that we are
only dealing with the electric field. Figure 1 shows two Fig. 2. Surface charges at the boundary between two adjoining conductors.
regions separated by a sheet of area S carrying a surface
charge density r ¼ q=S. As shown in any textbook on elec-
trodynamics, Gauss’ law interrelates the electric fields in resistivities q1 and q2 adjoin to a common boundary with
both regions. While the tangential components of the fields cross-sectional area A. Using Ohm’s law E ¼ jq, where j is
are continuous across the sheet, there is a discontinuity in the volume current density, we can relate the current I to the
the normal component whose magnitude is governed by the electric field by
surface charge density. If the sheet extends in the yz-plane,
we have A
I ¼ jA ¼ E: (4)
r q
E2;x  E1;x ¼ ; (1)
0
Because the current is constant in the circuit, we have
E2;y  E1;y ¼ 0; (2)
A A
E1 ¼ E2 ; (5)
E2;z  E1;z ¼ 0; (3) q1 q2

where 0 is the permittivity of free space. and applying Eq. (1) to the left boundary in Fig. 2 gives
The field can be written as the gradient of the electric
potential /. Although the field is discontinuous at the sheet, I
r ¼ 0 ðq2  q1 Þ: (6)
the potential is continuous everywhere (this can be shown A
from Maxwell’s equations, cf. Ref. 13); at any point, the field
vector is perpendicular to the equipotential lines (gray lines We get the same expression with opposite sign for the right
in Fig. 1). Because of the field discontinuity, there is a kink boundary in Fig. 2. A similar result has been found by
in the equipotential lines at the location of the surface Jefimenko.14
charges. A kink in the equipotential lines can thus be used as Equation (6) is a quantitative expression for the density of
an indicator for a sheet with surface charges. This observa- type-I surface charges. The physical interpretation of this
tion, which can be expressed quantitatively with the help of equation has already been stated—a constant current requires
Eq. (1), will be the key to the formulation of our surface a larger electric field inside the resistor than in the wire. A
charge rules. portion of this field is generated by the surface charges
described by Eq. (6). It should be noted that in the discussion
of Fig. 2, we disregarded charges at the outer surfaces of the
B. The magnitude of type-I surface charge densities
conductors even though in this example, there will be
Type-I surface charges are prototypically represented by charges at the conductor/air boundaries. These type-II sur-
the “resistor” shown in Fig. 2. Two conductors with different face charges are examined in Sec. II C.

C. The magnitude of type-II surface charge densities


Consider a piece of conductor where the conductor–air
interface lies in the yz-plane, as shown in Fig. 3. Inside the
conductor the electric field is directed parallel to the current
flow, say in y-direction. Using Eq. (1) and the fact that
E1;x ¼ 0, we deduce the normal field component just outside
the conductor is
r
E2;x ¼ : (7)
0
According to Eq. (2), the tangential component does not
change at the boundary so
E1;y ¼ E2;y ¼ E: (8)
We already mentioned that a kink in the equipotential lines
is an indicator of surface charges. Let a denote the kink angle
Fig. 1. Electric field at a boundary with surface charges. of an equipotential line at the conductor’s surface (see

783 Am. J. Phys., Vol. 80, No. 9, September 2012 Rainer Müller 783

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lines is known. Thus, we have effectively reduced the sur-
face charge problem to the task of finding the equipotential
lines for a DC circuit. Although exact solutions for the
potential have been found for simple geometries,2,3,5–8
obtaining solutions in general is a difficult problem. It is,
however, possible to determine the equipotential lines
approximately using a graphical approach. We provide a set
of simple rules for this approach below.
Let us consider an illustrative example. Figure 5 shows a
circuit consisting of a 20 -V battery and a single wire with
uniform resistivity throughout; the poles of the battery are
marked with “þ” and “.” Some features of the circuit’s
equipotential lines can be determined easily:
(1) Inside the wire, the electric potential can be determined
Fig. 3. The kink angle a can be related to the surface charge via the electric using Ohm’s law. Because the resistivity of the wire is
field discontinuity. uniform throughout, Ohm’s law implies that the electric
potential varies linearly along the wire. The potential
Fig. 3). Because a is also the angle between the outside elec- drops steadily from the plus pole to the minus pole.
tric field vector and the surface, we can relate this angle Thus, the equipotential lines pass through the wire at reg-
to the components of the electric field: tana ¼ E2;x =E2;y . ular intervals (as shown in Fig. 5).
Equation (7) then gives (2) Outside the wire, the electric potential drops from a max-
imum to a minimum between the poles of the battery.
r ¼ 0 Etana: (9) Accordingly, all equipotential lines must pass between
the poles of the battery.
Because the electric field E inside the conductor cannot be
easily measured, we can use Eq. (4) to write Using the two features above, we can specify a practical
method to find the distribution of surface charges in a given
Iq DC circuit. The rules are formulated for two-dimensional cir-
r ¼ 0 tana: (10) cuits, but they could be easily generalized to three dimensions.
A
What follows is a step-by-step procedure for this method.
This equation connects the surface charge density with the
Step 1: Draw the circuit. Using Ohm’s and Kirchhoff’s
kink angle of the equipotential lines. Note that the sign of
laws, determine the current and the value of the potential at
the surface charge density can immediately be read off from
each point of the conducting elements (wires, resistors,
the orientation of the kink with respect to the direction of
etc.).
current flow (as demonstrated in Fig. 4):
Step 2: Mark equal potential differences on the conductors.
• If a ¼ 0, there is no kink in the equipotential line and hence Divide the voltage of the battery into 20–30 equal parts and
no surface charge. mark the corresponding locations on the conductors, using
• If a > 0 (i.e., if the “arrowhead” formed by the kink points the results of step 1. In general, these equipotential marks
in the direction of the current flow), then r is positive. This will be straight lines parallel to the cross-section of the con-
situation is seen in the left portion of Fig. 4. ductor. On a wire with uniform resistivity, the marks will be
• If a < 0 (i.e., if the kink’s “arrowhead” points in the oppo- equally spaced (cf. Fig. 5); inside a resistor, the spacing will
site direction to the current flow), then r is negative. This
situation is seen in the left portion of Fig. 4.

III. FORMULATION OF THE SURFACE CHARGE


RULES
Equation (10) allows us to determine the distribution of
type-II surface charges if the kink angle of the equipotential

Fig. 4. The sign of the surface charges can be determined from the orienta- Fig. 5. Potential distribution in a homogeneous DC circuit. The voltage of
tion of the kink with respect to the direction of current flow. the battery is assumed to be 20 V.

784 Am. J. Phys., Vol. 80, No. 9, September 2012 Rainer Müller 784

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be smaller. This step forms the basis for the construction of merical results (Fig. 8 in Ref. 12) shows that our method
the equipotential curves. reproduces the correct surface charge distribution quite well.
Step 3: Draw an equal number (20–30) of starting points for
equipotential curves between the two poles of the battery.
(As discussed, all equipotential lines must pass the region IV. TESTING THE METHOD WITH AN ACCURATE
between the poles of the battery.) NUMERICAL STUDY
Step 4: Finish the construction of the equipotential curves.
Equipotential lines in DC circuits are rarely discussed in
Connect the starting points with the marks on the conduc-
textbooks. It may therefore be desirable to guide our intu-
tors, taking into account the following rules:
• Equipotential curves never cross.
ition with some examples. In what follows, we show an
• Equipotential curves cross conductors only at the points
accurate depiction of equipotential lines for several circuits.
The calculations are performed numerically as described
that have been determined in step 2. Otherwise, they must
below and the results are related to the surface charge rules
pass around all conductors.
• When drawing equipotential curves, it is helpful to imag-
stated above.
First we consider the DC circuit with uniform resistivity
ine they are elastic bands that repel each other.15
• Do not try to draw a smooth transition at the surface of
previously discussed in Fig. 5. A numerical calculation of
surface charges for a similar geometry has already been
the conductor; in general there will be a kink here.
• Far away from the circuit, the equipotential curves merge
carried out by Preyer.12 Because there is no interface
between different conducting materials, we are only deal-
into those of an electric dipole.
ing with type-II surface charges. In our calculations, we
Step 5: Use Fig. 4 to determine the sign of the (type-II) sur-
assume a potential of 610 V at the two poles of the bat-
face charges wherever there is a kink in the equipotential
tery. The “wire” has a uniform resistivity of 0.25 Xm and
curves. The magnitude of r can be determined using
a total length of 234 cm. For ease of computation and visu-
Eq. (10). In the drawing, it might be helpful to use symbols
alization, we consider a 2D situation where the z-compo-
like þþ, þ, 0, ,  to indicate relative amounts of sur-
nent of the current and the electric field are equal to zero
face charge.
everywhere.
Step 6: Determine the magnitude of the (type-I) surface
The electric field and the potential are calculated using the
charges at the interface between two conductors with differ-
commercial finite-element software package ANSYS MAX-
ent resistivities using Eq. (6). 16
WELL. It is used in the two-dimensional DC conduction
This method is illustrated in Fig. 6 where the surface mode, where the tangential component of the field and the
charges on a sinuous wire are constructed using paper and normal component of the current are assumed to be continu-
pencil. The resulting surface-charge pattern is quite complex ous along boundaries. The calculation is performed using a
even for this relatively simple circuit. Chabay and Sher- mesh of about 40 000 triangles. To determine the surface
wood1,17 consider a similar geometry in their discussion of charge distribution, the electric field is exported onto a
the field buildup mechanism. Using purely qualitative argu- regular grid and the surface charge density is calculated
ments, they find an approximate distribution that hardly using r  E ~ ¼ q=0 by numerically differentiating the elec-
resembles the complicated pattern seen here. Preyer dis- tric field. The results of the calculation are shown in Fig. 7.
cusses a similarly shaped wire and a comparison with his nu- We note the following features.
Electric field: The arrows denote the direction and magni-
tude of the electric field. The total field shown is the sum of
the field generated by the battery plus the field of the surface
charges. To reduce clutter, the region around the battery is
omitted because the field is so large. As expected, the elec-
tric field inside the wire points along the wire at all locations.
It is worth noting that, as opposed to electrostatics, the field
is not perpendicular to the surface of the conductor because
the latter is no longer an equipotential surface.
Equipotential lines: As stated above, all equipotential
lines pass between the two poles of the battery. This feature
may also be linked to the fact that in the 2D geometry con-
sidered here, the equipotential lines indicate the direction of
energy flow12 (i.e., the Poynting vector is perpendicular to
both the electric field and the z direction).
Surface charges: At first sight, the distribution of surface
charges appears somewhat complicated. A closer inspection,
however, reveals the following typical features:
(1) At the bends of the wire, a quadrupole-like charge distri-
bution guides the electric field around the bend. This func-
tion of surface charges is often mentioned in texts but the
corresponding surface charge distribution is hardly ever
discussed in detail. The structure of this “corner distribu-
tion” becomes more apparent as shown in Fig. 8. Note
Fig. 6. Paper-and-pencil construction of surface charges. The steps indi- that in this diagram, only the part of the electric field gen-
cated in the figure refer to the corresponding steps described in the text. erated by the surface charges is shown. Students may gain

785 Am. J. Phys., Vol. 80, No. 9, September 2012 Rainer Müller 785

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Fig. 7. Electric field, equipotential lines, and surface charges for a simple circuit with uniform resistivity. The density of surface charges is shaded from white
to black (red to violet) representing most positive to most negative, respectively. The scale gives the surface charge density in 1012 C/m2.

some confidence by verifying that the field “lines” which leads to a dipole-like character of the field far
actually run from positive to negative surface charges. from the circuit—is a remnant of the linearly varying
(2) There is a tendency for the surface charges to be more surface charge density on Sommerfeld’s infinite wire.2
positive closer to the positive pole of the battery and Most of the qualitative accounts seem to focus strongly
more negative closer to the negative pole. This feature— on this result;1,9,10,17 a linear variation of surface charge
is the dominant feature in most schematic diagrams in
the published literature. Figure 7 shows that the actual
surface charge distribution is much more complex.
We can make a quantitative estimate for the magnitude of
the surface charge using Eq. (9). Inside the homogeneous
wire, the electric field is constant and given by E ¼ V/L,
where V is the voltage on the poles of the battery and L is the
length of the wire. The surface charge density is thus
V
r ¼ 0 tana: (11)
L
Using V ¼ 20 V and L ¼ 2.34 m, we find

r ¼ ð7:6  1011 Þtana C=m2 : (12)

Therefore, on a location where the kink angle is 45 , the sur-


face charge density is 7:6  1011 C=m2 , a value consistent
Fig. 8. A detailed look at the surface charge distribution at a bend of the with the results obtained numerically (cf. Fig. 7). Such a sur-
wire from Fig. 7. In this figure, the arrows show only the part of the electric face charge density corresponds to approximately 500 elec-
field generated by the surface charges. trons per square millimeter.

786 Am. J. Phys., Vol. 80, No. 9, September 2012 Rainer Müller 786

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Fig. 9. Electric field, equipotential lines, and surface charges for a series connection of two resistors with arbitrarily twisted pieces of hookup wire (top) and a
parallel connection of two different resistors (bottom). The same shading/coloring scheme is used as in Fig. 7. The surface charge density is given in 1012 C/m2.

V. FURTHER EXAMPLES connected in series to a battery with arbitrarily curved pieces


of hookup wire. We can see that even in this “forbiddingly
Figure 9 shows the surface charges for two more compli- difficult” geometry,5 the equipotential lines are no harder to
cated circuits. In the top part of the figure, two resistors are construct than in the previous example. The shapes of the

787 Am. J. Phys., Vol. 80, No. 9, September 2012 Rainer Müller 787

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equipotential lines is predetermined to a large extent by their lies, and both contain exactly the same information. In this
uniform distance along the hookup wire. On the other hand, sense, the determination of surface charges provides a nice
the kink angle—and accordingly the amount of surface opportunity for students to practice the appropriate skill.
charge—sensibly depends on the orientation of the wire.
This observation substantiates Jackson’s statement that in ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
real circuits the surface charge distribution depends strongly
on the precise location of all parts of the circuit.3 The author would like to thank two anonymous referees
At the interface between the wire and the resistors the re- for their valuable suggestions. They helped to make the pre-
sistivity changes. Here, we come across type-I surface sentation of the subject matter much clearer.
charges of for the first time. There is a larger amount of
charge on the left resistor because its resistivity is twice as a)
Electronic mail: [email protected]
large as that of the right resistor (2 Xm compared to 1 Xm). 1
R. W. Chabay and B. A. Sherwood, Matter & Interactions, 3rd ed. (Wiley,
The wire’s resistivity is 0.25 Xm. New York, 2011).
2
The same two resistors are connected in parallel in the A. Sommerfeld, Electrodynamics (Academic, New York, 1952), pp. 125–130.
3
lower part of Fig. 9. The pattern of equipotential lines J. D. Jackson, “Surface charges on circuit wires and resistors play three
reflects the more complicated voltage distribution in the cir- roles,” Am. J. Phys. 64, 855–870 (1996).
4
O. Jefimenko, “Demonstration of the electric fields of current-carrying
cuit. In all previous examples, the current was the same in all conductors,” Am. J. Phys. 30, 19–21 (1962).
parts of the circuit. This is not the case in a parallel connec- 5
M. A. Heald, “Electric fields and charges in elementary circuits,” Am. J.
tion. For this reason, the relative amount of surface charge Phys. 52, 522–526 (1984).
6
can no longer be estimated from the kink angle alone, J. A. Hernandes and A. K. T. Assis, “The potential, electric field and sur-
although the signs of the charges are given correctly. face charges for a resistive long straight strip carrying a steady current,”
According to Eq. (10), the current I at the respective loca- Am. J. Phys. 71, 938–942 (2003).
7
J. A. Hernandes and A. K. T. Assis, “Electric potential for a resistive toroi-
tions has to be specified as well. In the parallel connection dal conductor carrying a steady azimuthal current,” Phys. Rev. E 68,
shown here, the current is largest between the poles of the 046611 (2003).
battery and before the circuit separates into two branches. 8
B. S. Davis and L. Kaplan, “Poynting vector flow in a circular circuit,”
Am. J. Phys. 79, 1155–1162 (2011).
9
H. Haertel, “A qualitative approach to electricity,” Report IRL87-0001,
VI. DISCUSSION Institute for Research on Learning Palo Alto (1987). Available online at
<www.astrophysik.uni-kiel.de/hhaertel/PUB/Stromkreis_Lit.htm>
It is generally thought that the determination of surface 10
I. Galili and E. Goihbarg, “Energy transfer in electrical circuits: A qualita-
charge distributions in all but the simplest circuits borders on tive account,” Am. J. Phys. 73, 141–144 (2005).
the impossible. In this paper, we have shown that this is 11
M. K. Harbola, “Energy flow from a battery to other circuit elements: Role
not the case. We have outlined a relatively simple scheme 12
of surface charges,” Am. J. Phys. 78, 1203–1206 (2010).
for the semi-quantitative construction of surface charge dis- N. W. Preyer, “Surface charges and fields of simple circuits,” Am. J. Phys.
68, 1002–1006 (2000).
tributions that can be applied to almost any circuit geometry. 13
D. J. Griffiths, Introduction to Electrodynamics (Prentice Hall, Upper Sad-
Using paper and pencil alone, this procedure takes about dle River, 1999), Eq. (2.34).
15 min to complete. The accuracy of the method is limited 14
O. D. Jefimenko, Electricity and Magnetism: An Introduction to the
by one’s ability to draw equipotential lines. In particular, the Theory of Electric and Magnetic Fields, 2nd ed. (Electret Scientific, Star
spatial resolution is determined by the number of equipoten- City, 1989), Chap. 9.5.
15
tial lines one chooses to draw. Typically, 20–30 lines will E. Grimsehl and W. Schallreuter, Lehrbuch der Physik: Bd. II (B. G. Teub-
lead to a reasonable resolution. ner, Leipzig, 1954).
16
Computer Program Ansoft Maxwell SV Version 9.0 (Ansoft Corporation,
Although students may be more familiar with field lines 2003).
than equipotential lines, we stress that anybody who is able 17
R. W. Chabay and B. A. Sherwood, “A unified treatment of eletrostatics
to draw field lines can construct equipotential lines. In free and circuits” (2006), WWW Document available online at
space, field lines and equipotential lines are orthogonal fami- <www.compadre.org/introphys/items/detail.cfm?ID¼10026>.

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