Does adding a dielectric to a capacitor increase the electric field?

AI Thread Summary
Inserting a dielectric into a capacitor with a constant potential difference increases the charge on the plates, but does not change the electric field. The additional charge is calculated as kCV - CV, where k is the dielectric constant. Despite the increase in charge, the electric field remains constant because the dielectric generates an opposing field that cancels out the effect of the added charge. This results in the electric field being expressed as E = Q/(Aε₀) - (kQ)/(Aε₀), leading to no net change in the electric field. Thus, the presence of the dielectric maintains the same electric field strength as without it.
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there is a capacitor with a constant potential difference of V in air. When a dielectric is completely inserted between the plates of the capacitor completely filling it, additional charge flows onto the positive plate.

The additional charge should be Q=kCV-CV right?

Would the induced charge on either faces of the dielectric be Q=kCV?

Since the dielectric doesn't change the electric field (V=ED), why doesn't the increase in charge on the plates increase the field?
 
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Yes, kCV is correct. extra charge is kCV - CV.

V = Ed

V is the same. d is the same. So E must be the same.
 
learningphysics said:
Yes, kCV is correct. extra charge is kCV - CV.

V = Ed

V is the same. d is the same. So E must be the same.

since there is an increase in charge on the plates, why doesn't this give rise to an increase in the E field since the increase in the chrage on the plates should serve to increase the field between the plates? I know V is the same and so E must be the same, I'm looking more for a conceptual idea.

also, there is kCV charge on the top on the dielectric right? does that mean that there is a -kCV charge on the bottom of the dielectric?
 
indigojoker said:
since there is an increase in charge on the plates, why doesn't this give rise to an increase in the E field since the increase in the chrage on the plates should serve to increase the field between the plates? I know V is the same and so E must be the same, I'm looking more for a conceptual idea.

Well, the field is \frac{\sigma}{\epsilon} which is \frac{Q}{A\epsilon}

so how does this change when the dielectric is inserted...


also, there is kCV charge on the top on the dielectric right? does that mean that there is a -kCV charge on the bottom of the dielectric?

yes.
 
charge increases when the dielectric is inserted so shouldn't the field increse too?

to: \frac{kCV}{A\epsilon}
 
indigojoker said:
charge increases when the dielectric is inserted so shouldn't the field increse too?

to: \frac{kCV}{A\epsilon}

k is the dielectric constant. so \epsilon = k\epsilon_0

plug this in and the k's cancel in the numerator and denominator...

so you're left with

\frac{CV}{A\epsilon_0}, which is just like without the dielectric.
 
okay, so i want to understand this in a non mathematical way.

in the same situation as above, we insert a dielectric and then we get an increase in charge on the plates. the reason why we don't get an increase in the E-field is because the dielectric creates an opposing field that makes it so the E-field does not change. is the right?
 
indigojoker said:
okay, so i want to understand this in a non mathematical way.

in the same situation as above, we insert a dielectric and then we get an increase in charge on the plates. the reason why we don't get an increase in the E-field is because the dielectric creates an opposing field that makes it so the E-field does not change. is the right?

Yes, that is correct.
 
but since the dielectric has the same amount of charge as the metal plates, wouldn't the two E-fields cancel out?
 
  • #10
indigojoker said:
but since the dielectric has the same amount of charge as the metal plates, wouldn't the two E-fields cancel out?

No, just because the charge is the same doesn't mean the field is the same.
 
  • #11
what is the field in the dielectric?
 
  • #12
would it be:

E=\frac{kQ}{A\epsilon_o}-\frac{Q}{A\epsilon_o}
 
  • #13
indigojoker said:
would it be:

E=\frac{kQ}{A\epsilon_o}-\frac{Q}{A\epsilon_o}

Yeah... I would write it as: E=\frac{Q}{A\epsilon_o}-\frac{kQ}{A\epsilon_o}

so when you add the field due to just the charge... you get the net field...
 
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