Zareon Posted March 10, 2006 Posted March 10, 2006 Take a parallel plate capacitor, area A and distance d. I know that E=sigma/e0, V=Ed, C=Ae0/d. I have also shown that the energy stored is 1/2CV^2=(e0/2)(E^2)(Ad). Now, if I increase the distance between the plates by an amount x, then E doesn't change and the increase in energy is (e0/2)(E^2)(Ax). But the work done by increasing the distance is Fx=(QE)x=A(sigma)Ex=e0(E^2)(Ax). Not equal to (e0/2)(E^2)(Ax), but twice that!! What's going on here!?
Externet Posted March 11, 2006 Posted March 11, 2006 Hi. If you increase the distance between plates the capacity diminishes greatly. Then, the energy does too. Miguel
Meir Achuz Posted March 20, 2006 Posted March 20, 2006 I can see you are thinking, but there is a resolution. The force on one plate of a capacitor is not \sigma AE. It is one half of that because E is due to both plates, but the force on plate 2 is only due to the E from plate 1.
Zareon Posted March 24, 2006 Author Posted March 24, 2006 Thanks for the replies. Externet: I know the capacitance decreases (like 1/x), but the potential difference increases (like x^2) so the total energy is increased and gives the same (correct) value for the energy. Meir Achuz: That took me a while to grasp, but I think I see what you are saying. The plate can't exert a force on itself (just like I can't lift myself up by my hair). So I shouldn't consider the E-field created by that plate when calculating the work done, only the one from the other plate, which is 1/2E. Is that right? Thanks a lot!
Externet Posted March 26, 2006 Posted March 26, 2006 Sorry, cannot follow your thinking... I lost you. Your first post says "...E doesn't change ..." And on your post above, says "...the potential difference increases (like x^2)..." No clue what you are thinking nor saying. Do not know what do you mean by E, by potential; by x. If potential E does not change and capacitance decreases; energy will decrease. Miguel
Zareon Posted March 27, 2006 Author Posted March 27, 2006 E is not the energy. E is the electric field. Yeah, confusing... I'm gonna denote the stored energy by W. So the electic field is constant: [math]E=\sigma/\epsilon_0[/math]. And the energy is: [math]W=1/2CV^2=\frac{\epsilon_0}{2}AdE^2[/math] What I meant is that the capacitance decreases inversely to the distance between the plates. That's what I meant by goes like 1/x, or rather 1/d. But the potential V increases linearly with the distance (goes like x). So the energy 1/2CV^2 goes increases linearly with the distance between the plates (like x). And I now realize this is not exactly the same as what I said in my previous post where I said V goes like x^2...which is wrong
Externet Posted March 28, 2006 Posted March 28, 2006 Still lost in space... V^2 is VERY different from 1/V^2 And where do you get "potential V increases linearly with the distance" from ? Miguel
Zareon Posted March 28, 2006 Author Posted March 28, 2006 Still lost in space... V^2 is VERY different from 1/V^2 Yes it is. I don't recall saying otherwise... Still lost in space...And where do you get "potential V increases linearly with the distance" from ? V=Ed, where d is the distance between the plates. That's entirely trivial.
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