What You Will Learn Today
By the end of this lesson, you will:
- Define capacitance and explain what a capacitor does
- Calculate using
- Calculate energy stored:
- Explain the role of a dielectric and how it increases
- Describe practical applications of capacitors
Why Can't a Battery Power a Flash Directly?
- A flash needs massive energy in ~1 ms — more power than a battery can deliver
- Solution: charge a capacitor slowly, release all at once in the flash
Capacitor = energy reservoir — slow fill, fast release
A Capacitor: Two Plates, One Gap
- Two conducting plates separated by an insulating gap
- Connected to a source:
on one plate, on the other - Uniform
between plates; disconnect → charge and field remain
Total charge = zero; the capacitor separates, not creates, charge
The Structure of a Parallel-Plate Capacitor
on top plate, on bottom — equal and opposite- Uniform
between plates (from prior lesson on parallel plates)
Capacitors Are in Everything Around You
- Camera flash — stores energy slowly, releases in ~1 ms
- Defibrillator — delivers a high-energy pulse to the heart
- Computer RAM — tiny capacitors store bits (0 or 1)
- Power supplies — smooth voltage fluctuations
Same principle: store charge, release on demand
Check-In: Voltage Doubles — What Happens?
A capacitor switches from 6 V to 12 V.
What happens to the charge on each plate?
A) Stays the same — it's already charged
B) Doubles — more voltage draws more charge
C) Halves — voltage compresses charge
Think: what does voltage do to charge?
Answer: Charge Doubles with Voltage
Answer: B — Charge doubles
- Voltage is the "push" that drives charge onto the plates
- Double the voltage → double the charge stored
- This is the linear relationship that defines capacitance:
Capacitance Connects Charge to Voltage
: charge stored (coulombs, C) : capacitance (farads, F); 1 F = 1 C/V : potential difference between plates (volts, V)- Practical units: microfarads (
F) or picofarads (pF)
C is a property of the geometry — not of Q or V alone
Capacitance Depends on Plate Geometry
— permittivity of free space- Larger
→ higher ; smaller → higher
Smaller gap: same
How Plate Geometry Changes Capacitance
- Larger
: more surface area → more charge per volt → higher - Smaller
: shorter field path → same gives lower → higher
Worked Example: Find C and Then Q
Check-In: Effect of Halving the Gap
Capacitor:
What happens to
A)
B)
C)
Apply
Answer: Smaller Gap Doubles Capacitance
Answer: B —
- Smaller gap → same
→ smaller → higher - This is why capacitors are built with very thin dielectrics (μm scale)
From Charge Storage to Energy Storage
- We can calculate
and for any capacitor - But capacitors store energy — that's what makes them useful
- How much energy is stored in the electric field between the plates?
The camera flash example will give us a real number — and a surprising one
Energy Stored in a Capacitor
- The
factor: charging isn't done at constant voltage — it builds from 0 to ; average voltage is - Energy is stored in the electric field between the plates
Three equivalent forms:
Three Equivalent Ways to Calculate Energy
- Convert between forms using
- Use whichever form matches the given quantities
If given
If given
Flash Capacitor: Energy and Power
, :- Released in 1 ms:
Check-In: Find Capacitance from Energy
A capacitor stores
Find the capacitance
Use
Try it before the next slide…
Answer: Rearranging the Energy Formula
- Rearrange first, then substitute numbers
- Unit check:
From Energy to the Field: Introducing Dielectrics
- Energy is stored in the field between the plates
- Can we store more energy without raising the voltage?
- Yes — insert a dielectric between the plates
Dielectric increases
A Dielectric: Insulator That Boosts Capacitance
- Dielectric: insulator between the plates (plastic, ceramic, paper)
- Polar molecules align with field → opposing internal field forms
- Net field reduced → same
, lower
Dielectric Polarization: How It Works
The dielectric reduces the net field — lower
Dielectric Constant κ Multiplies Capacitance
| Material | |
|---|---|
| Air | 1 |
| Paper | 3.7 |
| Plastic | 2–4 |
| Ceramic | 6–20 |
- High field → dielectric breaks down → short circuit
Worked Example: Insert a Dielectric
Key Takeaways: Capacitors and Dielectrics
✓
✓ Energy stored:
✓ Dielectric inserts multiply
Watch Out: Three Capacitor Misconceptions
Capacitors ≠ batteries — fast release, not sustained current
Bigger
Dielectric lowers field and voltage —
Chapter 18 Complete — What Comes Next
Chapter 19: Electric Current and Circuits
- Charge in motion → electric current
- Resistance and Ohm's Law:
- Capacitors in RC circuits: charge and discharge
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Capacitors and Dielectrics