Capacitance of a Metal Slab Inserted in an Air Capacitor

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The discussion centers on calculating the capacitance of an air capacitor with a metal slab inserted between its plates. The metal slab divides the capacitor into two capacitors in series, each with reduced separation. The correct capacitance formula incorporates the thickness of the slab, leading to a capacitance of ε_0A/(d-a) instead of the initially assumed ε_0A/(d-a)/2. For part b, the capacitance with the metal slab is expressed as a multiple of the original capacitance C_0, which requires understanding the series configuration. The key takeaway is recognizing how the insertion of the metal slab alters the effective separation and capacitance.
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EDIT: That ought to be, "Dielectrics," of course :)

Homework Statement



An air capacitor is made by using two flat plates, each with area A, separated by a distance d. Then a metal slab having thickness a (less than d) and the same shape and size as the plates is inserted between them, parallel to the plates, and not touching either plate.

a) What is the capacitance of this arrangement?
b) Express the capacitance as a multiple of the capacitance C_0 when the metal slab is not present.

Homework Equations



C = KC_0
C_0 = ε_0A/d

The Attempt at a Solution



At first glance, I thought this should be a pretty quick and painless process. If the capacitance of capacitors with a dielectric is C = KC_0, and C_0 in this case is ε_0A/(d-a)/2, then C=(Kε_0A)/[(d-a)/2] but the correct answer turns out to be ε_0A/(d-a) and I'm not really sure why that is?

For part b, I would have thought that the answer is simply C = ε_0A/d, but again that is incorrect.

Seems like I'm just missing some simple relation. If anyone could lend a hand, I'd really appreciate it!

Thank you :)
 
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Inserting a metal plate between the two plates of a capacitor effectively divides the capacitor into two in series (each face of the metal slab acts as a new capacitor plate for the original capacitor plate that it faces). So you get two capacitors in series, each has the same plate area as the original but a decreased plate separation.
 
That makes perfect sense, and makes things extremely easy from there.

Thank you so much again!
 
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