Inserting a dielectric into a capacitor connected to a battery
When a battery of voltage
is connected across an empty capacitor of capacitance
, the charge on its plates is
, and the electrical field between its plates is
. A dielectric of dielectric constant
is inserted between the plates
while the battery remains in place , as shown in
[link] . (a) Find the capacitance
C , the voltage
V across the capacitor, and the electrical field
E between the plates after the dielectric is inserted. (b) Obtain an expression for the free charge
Q on the plates of the filled capacitor and the induced charge
on the dielectric surface in terms of the original plate charge
.
Strategy
We identify the known values:
,
,
,
, and
. Our task is to express the unknown values in terms of these known values.
Solution
(a) The capacitance of the filled capacitor is
. Since the battery is always connected to the capacitor plates, the potential difference between them does not change; hence,
. Because of that, the electrical field in the filled capacitor is the same as the field in the empty capacitor, so we can obtain directly that
(b) For the filled capacitor, the free charge on the plates is
The electrical field
E in the filled capacitor is due to the effective charge
(
[link] (b)). Since
, we have
Solving this equation for
, we obtain for the induced charge
Significance
Notice that for materials with dielectric constants larger than 2 (see
[link] ), the induced charge on the surface of dielectric is larger than the charge on the plates of a vacuum capacitor. The opposite is true for gasses like air whose dielectric constant is smaller than 2.
Check Your Understanding Continuing with
[link] , show that when the battery is connected across the plates the energy stored in dielectric-filled capacitor is
(larger than the energy
of an empty capacitor kept at the same voltage). Compare this result with the result
found previously for an isolated, charged capacitor.
Check Your Understanding Repeat the calculations of
[link] for the case in which the battery remains connected while the dielectric is placed in the capacitor.
When a dielectric is inserted between the plates of a capacitor, equal and opposite surface charge is induced on the two faces of the dielectric. The induced surface charge produces an induced electrical field that opposes the field of the free charge on the capacitor plates.
The dielectric constant of a material is the ratio of the electrical field in vacuum to the net electrical field in the material. A capacitor filled with dielectric has a larger capacitance than an empty capacitor.
The dielectric strength of an insulator represents a critical value of electrical field at which the molecules in an insulating material start to become ionized. When this happens, the material can conduct and dielectric breakdown is observed.