Sign In

25.1 : Capacitors and Capacitance

A device consisting of two electrical conductors that are separated by a distance and used to store electrical charges is called a capacitor. The space between the conductors is either a vacuum or an insulating material, called a dielectric. Capacitors have many applications, ranging from filtering static from radio reception to energy storage in heart defibrillators.

When the conductors are two identical parallel plates, it is called a parallel plate capacitor. When battery terminals are connected to an initially uncharged capacitor, the battery potential moves a charge of magnitude Q from the positive plate to the negative plate. The capacitor remains neutral overall, but charges +Q and −Q reside on opposite plates. The magnitude of the electrical field in the space between the parallel plates is directly proportional to the surface charge density on one plate. Since the surface charge density is the charge per unit surface area, the magnitude of the electric field is directly proportional to the charge.

The capacitance of a capacitor is defined as the ratio of the maximum charge that can be stored in a capacitor to the applied voltage across its plates. The SI unit of capacitance is the farad (F), named after Michael Faraday. Since capacitance is the charge per unit voltage, one farad is one coulomb per one volt.

For a parallel plate capacitor, increasing the area of the plates increases the amount of charge that can be stored, thereby increasing the capacitance for a larger plate area. Similarly, the closer the plates are together, the greater the attraction of the opposite charges on them. Therefore, capacitance is greater for a smaller distance between the plates.

Tags
CapacitorCapacitanceElectrical ConductorsDielectricParallel Plate CapacitorCharge DensityElectric FieldFaradMichael FaradayEnergy StorageVoltageCharge Per Unit Area

From Chapter 25:

article

Now Playing

25.1 : Capacitors and Capacitance

Capacitance

6.4K Views

article

25.2 : Spherical and Cylindrical Capacitor

Capacitance

4.7K Views

article

25.3 : Capacitors in Series and Parallel

Capacitance

3.3K Views

article

25.4 : Equivalent Capacitance

Capacitance

1.1K Views

article

25.5 : Energy Stored in a Capacitor

Capacitance

3.2K Views

article

25.6 : Energy Stored in a Capacitor: Problem Solving

Capacitance

872 Views

article

25.7 : Capacitor With A Dielectric

Capacitance

3.3K Views

article

25.8 : Dielectric Polarization in a Capacitor

Capacitance

4.0K Views

article

25.9 : Gauss's Law in Dielectrics

Capacitance

3.8K Views

article

25.10 : Potential Due to a Polarized Object

Capacitance

264 Views

article

25.11 : Susceptibility, Permittivity and Dielectric Constant

Capacitance

980 Views

article

25.12 : Electrostatic Boundary Conditions in Dielectrics

Capacitance

834 Views

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved