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Capacitors in d.c. circuits

A capacitor is a gap in a with space for on the 'plates' shown as the horizontal lines.

A capacitor in the shape of a T, with an up side down T shape above it. There is a small gap between them.

When a capacitor is charged, electrons on the lower plate repel from the upper plate, which then move to the positive terminal of the supply.

Uncharged capacitor with + and - charges evenly distributed above top & below bottom plates. Charged capacitor with + charges above top plate & - charges below bottom plate.

The applied \(V_{c}\) to charge the capacitor (circuit 1 below) is measured with a and charge accumulated \(Q\) is measured by removing the charged capacitor from circuit 1 and connecting it to a coulomb meter (circuit 2).

Circuit diagram containing a voltage supply cell, a resistor, and a capacitor with a voltage capacitor across it.

By varying the charging voltage and measuring the associated charge\(Q\) a graph can be drawn.

The gradient of this graph is equal to the capacitance of the capacitor.

\(C= \frac{Q}{V}\)

And the area under the graph is the energy stored by the capacitor.

Graph of charge accumulated, Q, in coulombs against voltage applied, VC, in volts. The graph shows a straight line sloping diagonally upwards from the origin.

\(E= \frac{1}{2}QV\)

This can be combined with the equation for capacitance above to give two alternative equations for energy stored.

\(E= \frac{1}{2}\frac{Q^2}{C}\) and

\(E= \frac{1}{2}C{V^2}\)

Question

A \(2200 \mu F\) capacitor is charged up with a \(1.5 V\) cell.

(a) What charge is stored?

(b) What energy is stored?