0% found this document useful (0 votes)
121 views7 pages

V Q Q/V C Capacitance Charge On Either Plate Potential Difference Between The Plates C Q V

A capacitor stores energy in the form of an electric field between two parallel metal plates separated by an insulating material. The capacitance of a capacitor depends on the area of the plates, the distance between them, and the dielectric constant of the material between the plates. For a parallel plate capacitor, the capacitance is given by C=kε0A/d, where k is the dielectric constant. A capacitor's charge is given by Q=CV and the energy stored is W=1/2CV2. Capacitors can be combined in series or parallel. Series combinations reduce the overall capacitance while parallel combinations increase it.

Uploaded by

Joan Balendrez
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
121 views7 pages

V Q Q/V C Capacitance Charge On Either Plate Potential Difference Between The Plates C Q V

A capacitor stores energy in the form of an electric field between two parallel metal plates separated by an insulating material. The capacitance of a capacitor depends on the area of the plates, the distance between them, and the dielectric constant of the material between the plates. For a parallel plate capacitor, the capacitance is given by C=kε0A/d, where k is the dielectric constant. A capacitor's charge is given by Q=CV and the energy stored is W=1/2CV2. Capacitors can be combined in series or parallel. Series combinations reduce the overall capacitance while parallel combinations increase it.

Uploaded by

Joan Balendrez
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 7

Capacitance

A capacitor is a system that stores energy in the form of electric field. In its simplest form, a capacitor
consist of a pair of parallel metal plates separated by air or other insulating material.
The potential difference V between the plates of a capacitor is directly proportional to the charge Q on
either of them, so the ratio Q/V is always the same for a particular capacitor. This ratio is called the
capacitance C of the capacitor:

charge on either plate


Capacitance=
potential difference between the plates

Q
C=
V

Conversion: 1 Farad = 1 coulomb/volt

Parallel-Plate Capacitor
A capacitor that consists of parallel plates each of area A separated by the distance d has a capacitance
of

A
C=K ε o
d

The constant ε o is the permittivity of free space, its value is

ε o=8.85 x 10−12 C 2 /(N ∙ m2)

The quantity K is the dielectric constant of the material between the capacitor plates; the greater the K
is, the more effective the material is in diminishing an electric field. For free space, K=1, for air
K=1.0006∨1.0, a typical value of glass is K=6 and for water K=80.
1
Sample problem 1
A 200-pF capacitor is connected to a 100-V battery. Find the charge on the capacitor’s plate.
Ans. 20 nC

Sample problem 2
A capacitor has a charge of 5 x 10−4 C when the potential difference across its plates is 300 V. Find
its capacitance.
Ans. 1.67 μF

Sample problem 3
A parallel-plate capacitor has plates 5 cm square and 0.1 mm apart. Find its capacitance (a) in air
and (b) with mica of K=6 between the plates.
Solution:

A
a) C=K ε o
d
2
2 2 ( 5 ×10−2 m)
C=( 1 ) ( 8.85 ×10 −12
C / N∙m )
0.1× 10−3 m

C=221.25 pF

b) Ans. 1.33 nF

Sample problem 4
A parallel-plate capacitor has a capacitance of 2 μF in air and 4.6 μF when it is immersed in
benzene. What is the dielectric constant of benzene?
Solution.
Let C 1=2 μF ,C 2=4.6 μF , K 1=1 ,∧K 2=?

A
K 1 ε0
C1 d
=
C2 A
K 2 ε0
d

C1 K 1
=
C2 K 2
C2 4.6 μF
K 2=K 1 =( 1 ) =2.3
C2 2 μF

2
Sample problem 5
A 10−μF capacitor with air between its plates is connected to a 50-V source and then
disconnected. (a) What is the charge on the capacitor and the potential difference across it? (b) The
space between the plates of the charge capacitor is filled with Teflon ( K =2.1). What is the charge on
the capacitor and the potential difference across it now?
Solution.
a) The capacitor’s charge is

Q=CV =( 10× 10−6 F ) ( 50 V )=500 μC

b) The presence of another dielectric does not change the charge on the capacitor. Since its capacitance
is now
K2
C 2= C
K1 1

and V =Q /C , the new potential difference is

Q K1 Q K1 1
V 2= = = V 1=
C 2 K 2 C1 K 2 2.1 ( )
( 50 V )=23.8 V

Capacitors in Combination
The equivalent capacitance of a set of connected capacitors is the capacitance of the single capacitor
that can replace the set without changing the properties of any circuit it is part of. The equivalent
capacitance of set of capacitors joined in series is

C1 C2 C3 CT

1 1 1 1
= + +
C T C 1 C2 C 3

In a parallel set of capacitors, the equivalent capacitance is the sum of the individual capacitances:

C1
C2

C3

C T =C 1 +C2 +C 3
3
Sample problem 6
Three capacitors whose capacitance are 1, 2, and 3 μF are connected in series. Find the equivalent
capacitance of the combination.
1 1 1 1
= + +
C T C 1 C2 C 3

1 1 1 1
= + +
CT 1 μF 2 μF 3 μF

C T =545.45 nF

Sample problem 7
The three capacitors of Sample problem 6 are connected in parallel. Find the equivalent
capacitance of the combination.
Ans. 6 μF

Sample problem 8
A 2- and 3- μF capacitor are connected in series. (a) What is their equivalent capacitance? (b) A
potential difference of 500 V is applied to the combination, find the charge on each capacitor and the
potential difference across it.
Answer
a) 1.2 μF b) 600 μC

Energy of a Charged Capacitor


To produce the electric field in a charged capacitor, work must be done to separate the positive and
negative charges. This work is stored as electric potential energy in the capacitor. The potential energy
W of a capacitor of capacitance C whose charge is Q and whose potential difference is V is given by

2
1 1 2 1 Q
W = QV = C V =
2 2 2 C

4
Sample problem 9
A 1.2- μF capacitor is charge to 3.0 kV. Compute the energy stored in the capacitor.
Ans. 5.4 J

Sample problem 10
The series combination of two capacitors shown in the figure below is connected across 1000 V.
Compute (a) the equivalent capacitance of the combination, (b) the magnitude of the charges on the
capacitors, (c) the potential differences across the capacitors, and (d) the energy stored in the
capacitors.
V1 V2

C 1=3.0 pF C 2=6.0 pF

V= 1000 V

Ans
a) 2 pF
b) 2 nC
c) 666.67 V , 333.33V
d) EC =0.67 μJ , EC =0.33 μJ
1 2
5
Sample problem 11
The parallel capacitor combination shown in the figure below is connected across a 120-V source.
Determine the equivalent capacitance, the charge on the capacitors, and the total charge of the
combination.

C 1=2.0 pF

C 2=6.0 pF

V T =120 V

Solution.
C T =8 pF

q 1=0.24 nC
q 2=0.72 nC

q=0.96 nC

Sample problem 12
A laboratory capacitor consists of two parallel conducting plates, each with area 200 cm 2, separated
by a 0.40-cm air gap. (a) Compute each capacitance, If the capacitor is connected across 500-V source,
(b)find the charge on it, (c) the energy stored in it, (d) the electric field across the plates. (e) If a liquid
with K=2.60 is poured between the plates so as to fill the air gap, how much additional charge will
flow into the capacitor from the 500-V source?

Answer.
a) 44.25 pF
b) 22.13 nC
c) 5.53 μ J
d) 125,000 V /m
e) q=CV =( 2.6 × 44.25 ×10−12 F ) ( 500 V )=57.53 nC
The capacitor already had a charge of 22.13 nC , and so 57.53 nC−22.13 nC or 35.4 nC must have
been added to it.

You might also like