<< Chapter < Page Chapter >> Page >
By the end of this section, you will be able to:
  • Explain how energy is stored in a capacitor
  • Use energy relations to determine the energy stored in a capacitor network

Most of us have seen dramatizations of medical personnel using a defibrillator to pass an electrical current through a patient’s heart to get it to beat normally. Often realistic in detail, the person applying the shock directs another person to “make it 400 joules this time.” The energy delivered by the defibrillator is stored in a capacitor and can be adjusted to fit the situation. SI units of joules are often employed. Less dramatic is the use of capacitors in microelectronics to supply energy when batteries are charged ( [link] ). Capacitors are also used to supply energy for flash lamps on cameras.

This is a photograph of a PCB with an IC and various other components on it. The PCB is attached to a USB connector. Labels for all components are printed on the board.
The capacitors on the circuit board for an electronic device follow a labeling convention that identifies each one with a code that begins with the letter “C.”

The energy U C stored in a capacitor is electrostatic potential energy and is thus related to the charge Q and voltage V between the capacitor plates. A charged capacitor stores energy in the electrical field between its plates. As the capacitor is being charged, the electrical field builds up. When a charged capacitor is disconnected from a battery, its energy remains in the field in the space between its plates.

To gain insight into how this energy may be expressed (in terms of Q and V ), consider a charged, empty, parallel-plate capacitor; that is, a capacitor without a dielectric but with a vacuum between its plates. The space between its plates has a volume Ad , and it is filled with a uniform electrostatic field E . The total energy U C of the capacitor is contained within this space. The energy density     u E in this space is simply U C divided by the volume Ad . If we know the energy density, the energy can be found as U C = u E ( A d ) . We will learn in Electromagnetic Waves (after completing the study of Maxwell’s equations) that the energy density u E in a region of free space occupied by an electrical field E depends only on the magnitude of the field and is

u E = 1 2 ε 0 E 2 .

If we multiply the energy density by the volume between the plates, we obtain the amount of energy stored between the plates of a parallel-plate capacitor: U C = u E ( A d ) = 1 2 ε 0 E 2 A d = 1 2 ε 0 V 2 d 2 A d = 1 2 V 2 ε 0 A d = 1 2 V 2 C .

In this derivation, we used the fact that the electrical field between the plates is uniform so that E = V / d and C = ε 0 A / d . Because C = Q / V , we can express this result in other equivalent forms:

U C = 1 2 V 2 C = 1 2 Q 2 C = 1 2 Q V .

The expression in [link] for the energy stored in a parallel-plate capacitor is generally valid for all types of capacitors. To see this, consider any uncharged capacitor (not necessarily a parallel-plate type). At some instant, we connect it across a battery, giving it a potential difference V = q / C between its plates. Initially, the charge on the plates is Q = 0 . As the capacitor is being charged, the charge gradually builds up on its plates, and after some time, it reaches the value Q . To move an infinitesimal charge dq from the negative plate to the positive plate (from a lower to a higher potential), the amount of work dW that must be done on dq is d W = V d q = q C d q .

Practice Key Terms 1

Get Jobilize Job Search Mobile App in your pocket Now!

Get it on Google Play Download on the App Store Now




Source:  OpenStax, University physics volume 2. OpenStax CNX. Oct 06, 2016 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col12074/1.3
Google Play and the Google Play logo are trademarks of Google Inc.

Notification Switch

Would you like to follow the 'University physics volume 2' conversation and receive update notifications?

Ask